If my bank fails, will I still have access to my money? – Should I bail out of the stock market? – Are money market funds still safe? – What about other insurers? Should I be concerned about them? – Will I survive the financial crisis? -? -?
Meanwhile:
“Each year, over 1.6 million people world-wide lose their lives to violence. Violence is among the leading causes of death for people aged 15-44 years worldwide, accounting for 14% of deaths among males and 7% of deaths among females.” - by WHO
“One of the most significant causes of fear and insecurity in many cities today is crime and violence. Between 1990 and 2000, incidents of violent crime per 100,000 persons increased from 6 to 8.8. Recent studies show that over the past five years, 60 per cent of all urban residents in the world have been victims of crime, with 70 per cent in Latin America and the Caribbean. Clearly, crime, whether violent or not, is a growing and serious threat to urban safety all over the world.” - by UN habitat
Terry Lynn is scanning her urban environment; the output is music: strong beats, frank words, unfiltered images. She is from the ‘ghetto’ Waterhouse, Kingston, Jamaica. Her urban environment is violent.
“I’m a child of the soil, I was born in the ghetto — Where the gangstas roll by and then gunshot echo — You have to hide inna your place and tuck down like a gecko”
- by Terry Lynn
The world-wide crisis is not just a money issue. There are not just banks dying – there are actually human beings dying in a great many. The situation is alarming; the people are desperate getting violent. But we don’t want to see guns and knifes. Terry Lynn and her creative partner Russell ‘Phred’ Hergert created a language (visual and audio) to transmit that reality straightforward. Hard to digest? But how do you speak about a topic not allowed to show/name it? Softness risks to not seeing the problem, which makes it impossible to solve it.
Listen to her own words here in the interview or in her music if you like the beat. Watch the videos – it’s not made for voyeurism – it’s a scan of everyday life in a neighbouring district.
A short and superficial overview on the HISTORY OF FILM in Brazil. As you know I made a critical remark to the Golden Bear for Tropa de Elite. I just would like to suggest some other favela-films which are worth to be watched.
Next monday you get a cast on TV Roc, the broadcasting from Rocinha.
Topics of the Brazilian film history and films I am refering to:
I tried to find the youtube links – only the newer ones are in English. When I linked the English title than it should be in English. Cinema Novo
= italian Neo-realism (for example: Roma Città Aperta from Bertolucci)
‘Rio 40 Graus‘ /Rio at 40 degrees, 1955/ and ‘Rio Zona Norte’ /Rio Northern Zone, 1957/ from Nelson Pereira dos Santos,
You may watch the whole film in Portuguese. This here is just the first sequence. The rest you can find on youtube.
Cinco vezes Favela /five times favela 1962/, a collective film
Gláuber Rocha calls it in 1965 the “aesthetic of famine”.
Cinema Marginal
‘Terra em Transe‘ /Gláuber Rocha, Land in Trance 1967/,
DVD out just in portuguese.
‘Macunaíma‘ /1969 by Joaquim Pedro/,
in Portuguese and French
The scene with the swimming pool is from the Parque Lage.