This doc tells the true story of the high profile controversy involving poor farmers and their supporters, including celebrity tree sitters, the developer and the city over the largest urban farm in the U.S. It includes a rare interview with the developer and highlights the farmers determined efforts to stay connected to the land after eviction and bulldozing. The film includes farm leaders Tezo and Rufina Juarez and celebrity tree sitters Daryl Hannah, Joan Baez, Julia Butterfly Hill, and John Quigley, as well as other supporters such as Martin Sheen and musicians Tom Morello and Willie Nelson who brought international attention to the issue. Others interviewed include human rights activist Don White, radio host Lila Garrett. former Santa Monica Mayor Mike Feinstein and author Marion Nestle (Politics of Food).
The film is directed by Sheila A. Laffey, who also produced and co-directed THE LAST STAND series on the Ballona Wetlands hosted by Ed Asner with Joni Mitchell music which won 19 awards, including a Telly Award for the 13 part PBS series, NATURAL HEROES in which it aired. She co-produced the farm doc with Geoffrey Pepos, Sundance alum whose dramatic feature soon to be released is The Violent Kind. Assistant director is Jeff Forster.
The film includes footage by Daryl Hannah of the farm before the bulldozing and Oscar winning cinematographer Haskell Wexler filmed the evictions and arrest.
The film includes powerful footage of the bulldozing of the 14 acres where 350 families had worked the land for 14 years. It ends with determined farmers selling food they now grow elsewhere and celebrating their heritage next to the empty land.
2 DIFFERENT TRAILERS FOR THE FILM ARE POSTED AT
http://www.envirofilms.com
http://www.naturalheroes.org
CONTACT: Sheila A. Laffey, Director and Co-Producer
ECHO MOUNTAIN PRODUCTIONS, Santa Monica
310-453-4272
Quote about the film from Robert Dickman, author Elements of Pursuasion, and story coach:
"Laffey and Peposs film, South Central Farms, is an extraordinary documentary. I was quickly got caught up in the drama that was so well defined between the farming families, the city and landowner. It is an ancient moral story recast powerfullyin modern times."
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