LEGALIZE IT - MOVIE SEGMENTS
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 1
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 2
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 3
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 4
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 5
LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SEGMENT 6
Friday, November 23, 2012
Saturday, November 17, 2012
TREE LIVING INTERVIEW
Thanks to Tree Living for this fun interview at the Artivist Film Festival.
The film has only had sneak peek screenings but is already getting buzz.
I'm delighted Tree living decided to let their viewers learn about this film.
Here's the link:
Treeliving.tv
http://treeliving.tv/video/G4X4K77B2Y47/Dan-Katzir-“Legalize-It”-–-Green-Event-Spotlight
Thanks to Tree Living for this fun interview at the Artivist Film Festival.
The film has only had sneak peek screenings but is already getting buzz.
I'm delighted Tree living decided to let their viewers learn about this film.
Here's the link:
Treeliving.tv
http://treeliving.tv/video/G4X4K77B2Y47/Dan-Katzir-“Legalize-It”-–-Green-Event-Spotlight
Sunday, November 11, 2012
LEGALIZE IT - SNEAK PEEK LONG BEACH SCREENING
From Medical Marijuana 411
http://medicalmarijuana411.com/mmj411_v3/?p=13252
Richard Lee Interview after screening:
Libertarian Vice Presidential Nominee Retired Judge Jim Gray speaking at the event:
From Medical Marijuana 411
http://medicalmarijuana411.com/mmj411_v3/?p=13252
Richard Lee Interview after screening:
Libertarian Vice Presidential Nominee Retired Judge Jim Gray speaking at the event:
LEAP Fundraiser in Long Beach Brings Big Names
Richard Lee, Dale Sky Jones, and Jeff Jones were honored at a film screeningfor Legalize It, a film about California’s Prop 19, Produced by Willie Nelson’s Luck Films, and big names come out to the Long BeachArt Theatre, including LEAPSpeaker and Vice Presidential Candidate Judge Jim Gray, Drug Policy Alliance State Director Lynne Lyman, and Former City Council Member forLong Beach Rae Gabelich.
The film screening was the first time a Southern California audience had the chance to see the film and there was a Q & A with the filmmakers and several key subjects in the film, including Vice Presidential Candidate for the Libertarian Party, Judge Jim Gray, who has been a critic of the War on Drugs for more than two decades.
The film focuses on California’s Proposition 19, which would’ve mademarijuana legal and therefore it could be regulated, controlled and taxed, which cannot be done with illegal substances.
Those behind Prop 19 are the central figures in the film, Richard Lee, who funded a majority of the initiative and was the lynchpin for bringing to the California voters an option for adults to get intoxicated with other than alcohol, and cannabis is the safer option.
During these last elections, Washington and Colorado both successfully achieved what California could not and many believe it wouldn’t be possible without California kickstarting the conversation around the country when all eyes were on California’s popular propositions just two years ago.
LEAP Speakers Stephen Downing, Kyle Kazan, and Diane Goldstein also took the stage and spoke about the need to end the prohibition of marijuana in the states that have it on the ballot and have formally endorsed the initiative.
Downing, who was a Los Angeles Police Deputy Chief and saw the escalation of the Drug War, formally apologized for his actions this summer while on the Caravan For Peace while traveling with around 100 victims of Mexico’s Drug War.
One of the victims who heard Chief Downing’s apology in Atlanta was also on the evening panel, and retold some of her story to the Long Beach audience as well.
The evening was a success, and is sure to be the first of many to follow as LEAP looks to other communities and their leaders to bring an end tomarijuana prohibition once and for all.
Other sponsors of the evening event were The Drug Policy Alliance, Students for Sensible Drug Policy, Moms United to End the War on Drugs, as well as local Long Beach businesses, where the war on drugs has reached the medical cannabis dispensing market as the city fights back against the will of the voters as the work out regulations for medical marijuana.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
REASON.COM REPORTS ON LEGALIZE IT MOVIE SCREENING
LINK TO REASON.COM ARTICLE ABOUT LEGALIZE IT SCREENING:
Prop. 19 Documentary Legalize It Screened in Long Beach
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition held a benefit Wednesday evening to provide a screening of Legalize It, a documentary about California’s Proposition 19 — the failed 2010 effort to legalize and regulate marijuana — and to honor the leaders behind it.
The gathering brought together a number of anti-drug war activists familiar to anybody following the movement closely here at Reason. Gretchen Burns Bergman from Moms United was in attendance, as was Belen Ascencion of the Caravan for Peace, which crossed the nation this summer to draw attention to the failures of the drug war and its deadly impact on both American and Mexican citizens. Judge Jim Gray, Libertarian Party vice presidential candidate and member of LEAP, was on hand as well. The benefit and screening took place, interestingly enough, in Long Beach, where law enforcement officers recently shut down several pot dispensaries, enforcing a city prohibition that likely violates state law.
Attention now is on Washington State and Colorado, where similar initiatives are showing close numbers in the polls. Legalization is also up for consideration in Oregon, but the poll numbers there aren’t as positive.
“What we’re doing today in Colorado is standing on the shoulders of Prop. 19,” Gray said when asked how Proposition 19’s efforts have influenced these new attempts.
“If those two pass it’s historic,” said Diane Goldstein of LEAP. “We don’t believe we would have made it to this moment. We would never have had this effort,” without the experiences from fighting for Proposition 19.
For Richard Lee, president of Oaksterdam University, Prop. 19 sponsor, and central figure in the Legalize It documentary, the battle within the marijuana community to try and drum up support as medical growers turned protectionist and opposed legalization is still a point of frustration for him.
“Cutthroat politics from our own side,” Lee said. “I didn’t expect it.” In Washington State, legalization supporters are now also dealing withopposition from medical marijuana providers.
But how was the actual documentary?
Filmed by Dan Katzir with Ravit Markus and Lati Grobman as producers, the small crew focuses almost entirely on Oaksterdam’s Lee, Jeff Jones, and Dale Sky (who will become Dale Sky Jones during the course of the documentary) and their struggles to push the proposition forward. The small crew keeps much of the filming in Oakland, even as the movement grows. While this works when the push is still young, toward the end I was hoping for a broader view showing more of California somehow. Katzir does the best he can here by showing us clips of Prop. 19 showing up in pop culture (on Real Time with Bill Maher, for example) and showing journalists coming to Oaksterdam to interview them.
As somebody who tends to follow issues as matters of policy rather than personality, I actually appreciated the interactions between people rather than any discussions about the drug war for the benefit of the audience. For me, the documentary really came alive not just as more people become involved (Lee’s conservative extremely Texan mother is a highlight) but as the opposition among medical marijuana providers develops. The Oaksterdam crew are clearly thrown by it and struggle to respond. They’re practically drowned out by opposition at a hemp expo. It’s remarkable, but sadly unsurprising, to see opponents callously argue in favor of keeping the drug war going in order to protect their own business.
Legalize It is being screened at churches in Washington, Oregon, and Colorado in the run up to the Nov. 6 election.
LINK TO REASON.COM ARTICLE ABOUT LEGALIZE IT SCREENING:
Monday, October 22, 2012
LONG BEACH SPECIAL SCREENING OF LEGALIZE IT!
Thanks to Weedblog.com for posting this article about our screening follow the link or read the article below:
WEED BLOG REPORTS ON LONG BEACH SCREENING
Thanks to Weedblog.com for posting this article about our screening follow the link or read the article below:
WEED BLOG REPORTS ON LONG BEACH SCREENING
Willie Nelson Marijuana Legalization Documentary Presented By Pro-Legalization Cops
Posted by Johnny Green at 8:28 AM on October 18, 2012
Special Screening With Chance To Meet Film’s Stars At Pre-Film Wine & Appetizer Reception, Panel Discussion, Award Presentation To Follow
LONG BEACH, Calif. – Law Enforcement Against Prohibition presents a special preview screening of Willie Nelson’s Luck Films’ new documentary Legalize It on the Prop. 19 campaign to legalize marijuana in California in 2010. A discussion of the film, the campaign and similar measures currently on the ballot in Washington, Oregon and Colorado will follow the screening. Guests purchasing a Gold Status ticket will also have a chance to mingle with many of those portrayed in the film at a private reception beforehand.
What: Legalize It, a documentary about the Prop. 19 campaign
When: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 7-10pm
Where: Art Theatre of Long Beach, 2025 E. 4th Street, Long Beach
How: Tickets available online and start at $10; Reception starts at $50. Please see the website www.leap.cc/california-benefit/ or contact Diane Goldstein (diane.goldstein@leap.cc or 714.232.3722) to learn more or for information on sponsorship packages.
When: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 7-10pm
Where: Art Theatre of Long Beach, 2025 E. 4th Street, Long Beach
How: Tickets available online and start at $10; Reception starts at $50. Please see the website www.leap.cc/california-benefit/ or contact Diane Goldstein (diane.goldstein@leap.cc or 714.232.3722) to learn more or for information on sponsorship packages.
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) is a nonprofit organization of cops, judges, prosecutors and other law enforcement officials dedicated to ending the prohibition of marijuana. Several LEAP speakers who appear in the film, including former LAPD Deputy Chief Stephen Downing and Libertarian Vice Presidential candidate and former judge Jim Gray, will be on hand for interviews. Jeff and Dale Sky Jones and Richard Lee of Oaksterdam University will be on hand to receive a special award, and Rick Schlosser of the California Council of Churches, Producer Ravit Markus and other drug reform activists will attend the private reception and appear on the panel following the film.
Legalize It, a labor of love from award-winning filmmaker Dan Katzir and producers Ravit Markus and Lati Grobman of Campbell Grobman Films, is a sensitive and humorous behind-the-scenes look at a colorful campaign, the unlikely people running it and the disparate groups who both opposed and endorsed it. In the end, the passion and courage of the campaign leaders transformed a local ballot measure into a mainstream political topic and changed minds the world over.
“In any battle, the people who go in first are going to take one hell of a beating. In the fight to legalize marijuana, the Prop. 19 campaign folks were those people. If and when ballot measures in other states succeed, it will be because these folks cleared the way.” – LEAP Executive Director Neill Franklin
See more about the film and its Long Beach screening atwww.legalizeitmovie.com/ or www.leap.cc/california-benefit/.
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) represents law enforcement officials who, after fighting on the front lines of the “war on drugs,” came to believe that prohibition only serves to worsen substance abuse and violence. More info atwww.CopsSayLegalizeMarijuana.com
LONG BEACH FUNDRAISER FOR RETIRED COPS TO SHOW LEGALIZE IT!
Thanks to medicalmarijuana411.com for posting this article:
Fundraiser for LEAP to include Judge Jim Gray at Film Screening in Long Beach
Legalize It highlights California’s Prop 19 and brings a Q & A to the Long Beach Art Theatre
By Sam Sabzehzar | October 21, 2012
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition will host a benefit in the Los Angeles area to draw support for the voice oflaw enforcement in drug policy reform.
The evening will feature a first-look screening of the film Legalize It, a panel discussion from LEAP speakersand Legalize It producers and a special awards presentation honoring the heroes of California’s Proposition 19 movement, Richard Lee, Dale Sky Jones and Jeff Jones of OaksterdamUniversity.
The film Legalize It, which features many LEAP speakers including current Libertarian Vice Presidential Candidate Judge Jim Gray, will screen in Long Beach, where there has been much controversy regarding medical cannabisdispensing centers.
All proceeds from the screening will benefit Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), which endorsed Prop 19 and is featured in the film.
The screening and Q & A, will take place this Wednesday, October 24, 2012.
Panelists:
Ravit Markus, Producer
Stephen Downing, Deputy Chief, LAPD (Retired), LEAP
Judge Jim Gray, LEAP
Belen Ascencion, Caravan for Peace and Justice
Lynne Lyman, Drug Policy Alliance
Reverend Rick Schlosser, California Council of Churches
Gretchen Bergman, A New PATH & Mom’s United to End the War on Drugs
Ravit Markus, Producer
Stephen Downing, Deputy Chief, LAPD (Retired), LEAP
Judge Jim Gray, LEAP
Belen Ascencion, Caravan for Peace and Justice
Lynne Lyman, Drug Policy Alliance
Reverend Rick Schlosser, California Council of Churches
Gretchen Bergman, A New PATH & Mom’s United to End the War on Drugs
Legalize It is an inspiring documentary that captures the powerful and moving story of the 2010 campaign to legalize cannabis in California. The Prop 19campaign was a journey demonstrating that even those without wealth and political connection can bend the arc toward greater social justice.
Legalize It is a sensitive and humorous behind-the-scenes look at a colorfulcampaign, the unlikely people running it and the disparate groups who both opposed and endorsed it. The film features LEAP speakers Judge Jim Gray, Deputy Chief Stephen Downing, Lieutenant Diane Goldstein, former police officer Kyle Kazan and retired prosecutor/former police sergeant William John Cox.
Please join us on October 24 for LEAP’s California Benefit featuring a screening of Legalize It. To purchase tickets, click here
Fundraiser for LEAP to include Judge Jim Gray at Film Screening in Long Beach
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
OREGON SHOWS LEGALIZE IT MOVIE
And now the film is off to Oregon: Thanks to TOKE OF THE TOWN FOR REPORTING:
http://www.tokeofthetown.com/2012/10/measure_80_brings_legalize_it_documentary_filmmake.php
And now the film is off to Oregon: Thanks to TOKE OF THE TOWN FOR REPORTING:
http://www.tokeofthetown.com/2012/10/measure_80_brings_legalize_it_documentary_filmmake.php
As voters begin receiving their voter pamphlets and as voter registration closes, the Yes on 80 campaign is bringing the soon-to-be-released social documentary, Legalize It, and its filmmaker, Dan Katzir, to Oregon for a series of screenings and private events.
Legalize It is an inspiring journey demonstrating that even those without wealth and political connection can bend the arc toward greater social justice.
The public screenings give Oregonians a special opportunity to preview the documentary, which follows the Proposition 19 campaign in California that, in 2010, transformed a fringe social issue into a mainstream political topic and set the stage for marijuana-policy reform efforts in 2012 in Oregon, Colorado and Washington.
"Regardless how you feel about marijuana, prohibition as a policy has failed," said director Dan Katzir, whose films have won 22 international awards. "We followed what began as a seemingly tiny, hopeless campaign in Oakland, California and witnessed it opening hearts and minds the world over to the devastating social injustice involved in the American marijuana policy."
With showings October 18-21 at the Clinton Street Theater in Portland, Mt. Hood Community College and Oregon State University, Oregonians will have the opportunity to speak directly with the filmmaker, as well as with a star from the film and representatives from the Measure 80 campaign to discuss prior efforts in California and the need and opportunity to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana in Oregon.
October 18th 3-6 pm: Oregon State University, Snow Building, International Forum
October 19th 3-6 pm: Mt. Hood Community College, 26000 Southeast Stark Street, Room #22
October 20th 1-4 pm: Clinton Street Theater, 2522 SE Clinton, Portland - Special Admission $5
Prop 19 was the first marijuana-legalization ballot initiative to garner support across the political spectrum. Proponents included the California Council of Churches, the NAACP, labor unions (UFCW and SEIU), the ACLU, Fox News(!), Glenn Beck(!), Bill Maher, Ron Paul, the Latino Voters League, and the retired police officers and judges of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) -- notably Judge Jim Gray, the Libertarian Party's candidate for Vice President of the United States.
Similarly, Oregon's Measure 80 has secured support from past and present Oregon civic leaders like Rep. Peter Buckley and Secretary of State Bill Bradbury, the UFCW, the NAACP, law-enforcement organizations like LEAP, including Judge Jim Gray, GOP State Senate candidate Cliff Hutchison, the Republican Liberty Caucus of Oregon.
To learn more about the opportunity Oregon has to repeal marijuana prohibition, regulate marijuana for adults 21 and older, and re-introduce agricultural hemp into Oregon's sustainable economy, visit www.Vote80.org.
DENVER CHURCHES SHOW LEGALIZE IT - MOVIE
It is so heartwarming that churches across the nation are starting to discuss the social issue of our latest film.
We had an unbelievable screening in Denver. Thanks to Weedblog for the article:
http://www.theweedblog.com/denver-churches-host-a-new-marijuana-legalization-documentary-and-64-discussion/
Posted by Johnny Green at 11:00 AM on October 9, 2012
AFTER THE SCREENING THERE WAS ANOTHER ARTICLE:
Michigan Medical Marijuana Report
Legalize It: Notes from the Film Screening in Denver and the Power the Proposed Amendment 64
By Ben Horner
Denver, Colorado- Upon arriving at the Denver, one quickly realizes that this city is one of America’s strongest and most progressive. Magnificent snow capped mountains loom in the background of the impressive skyline. Modern skyscrapers and historical architecture stand tall against nature’s majestic backdrop. This is a cosmopolitan Mecca. More importantly, Colorado is one state that is leading the way in progressive marijuana law reform. Amendment 64, if passed by the voters, will fully legalize marijuana for personal use and cultivation on private property. In this proposed constitutional amendment there is framework of a regulatory system for retail locations, as well as guidelines for an excise tax of up to 15%. The first 40 million dollars of revenue received will be reserved for the general education fund. Polling data currently indicates the voters are strongly in favor of passing the amendment – 51% in favor, 42% against, and 7 yet undecided (According to the October 5th University of Denver poll.)
At the United Presbyterian Church located at 1400 Layfette Street, Christian ministers hosted an advanced screening of Legalize It, a film by Award-winning filmmaker Dan Katzir, which was produced by Ravit Markus and Lati Grobma. Following the documentary was a cordial debate with respect to Colorado’s Amendment 64. Although the movie documents California’s failed Prop 19 (Regulate Marijuana like Alcohol), the story really shows an inside picture of the internal struggle passing the people’s enacted initiatives and the toll it plays on the progressive leaders that spearhead these campaigns.
Legalize It focuses on the people directly behind Prop 19. The movie outlines the raw courage and personal sacrifice made, as well as the tremendous sacrifices and efforts made by the many others who volunteered for the campaign. Richard Lee spent all of the money he had generated from Oaksterdam University.
Unfortunately, the opposition was the very people that should have been their allies. An opposition group formed against Prop 19, which is based around some African-American Christian ministers, California’s cannabis growers, and the Mexican drug cartels. The growers and thug drug dealers resist due to fear of a shift of their share of the marijuana production market going to large corporate enterprises. Signs urging voters of Cali to “Vote NO on Prop 19” were placed at dispensaries around the state. The opposition dismayed the leaders of the campaign for Prop 19. They truly underestimated the greed factor and internal corruption within the movement. Did they not realize that the biggest victims in the drug war are cannabis consumers, children, and minorities? Inevitably, as most know, Prop 19 failed. This was due primarily to a lack in funding and unified grassroots support in addition to the misguided opposition.
To their credit, Richard Lee and all that fought to legalize marijuana pioneered the cause with new ideas and political strategies. The people involved changed public perception regarding marijuana and the drug war. They brought national spotlight to the issue. Although the advanced screening still had some preproduction work yet to be done, I would highly recommend the film.
Following the screening, representatives for and against Colorado’s Amendment 64 discussed the issue. Ben Cort, who a drug rehab counselor and represented the opposition against Prop 64, expressed his concerns. He opined and suggested that a constitutional amendment was not the right vehicle, as the particular language proposed in the amendment creates a federal supremacy issue. He expressed that his greatest concern is for the youth. He cited a Rand study which projects an increase in youths who use marijuana if legalized. Betty Aldworth, of the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, argued that there are approximately 10,000 pot-related offenses in the state last year, and not all of those were problematic. She pointed out that disparity of race and income ratios of those crimes are indicative of social injustice and inequality. Amsterdam has had huge growth of black market after barring coffee shops from sell marijuana to tourists. Ms. Aldworth countered that Colorado people should be able to make their own choices; the language of Amendment is flexible regarding regulation.
On November 6th, the citizens of Colorado will decide which point of view is to become policy. The contrast of professionalism in Colorado and Washington’s legalization of retail marijuana is sure to set the standard moving forward.
It is so heartwarming that churches across the nation are starting to discuss the social issue of our latest film.
We had an unbelievable screening in Denver. Thanks to Weedblog for the article:
http://www.theweedblog.com/denver-churches-host-a-new-marijuana-legalization-documentary-and-64-discussion/
Denver Churches Host A New Marijuana Legalization Documentary And 64 Discussion
Posted by Johnny Green at 11:00 AM on October 9, 2012
Provocative Background Information As It Relates To Colorado
You are invited to a presentation and discussion on Amendment 64. There will be a showing of the new documentary, Legalize It. The movie explores the social justice implications of the failed War on Drugs and why marijuana needs to be legal and regulated. It celebrates the power of ordinary people of different backgrounds and political persuasions coming together on a common issue, organizing together for social justice. The film shows how legalization means rehabilitation instead of incarceration and prison and how it not only saves federal and state money, but saves lives. Come and see the documentary and talk about it.
When: Friday October 12, 2012 7pm.
Where: First Unitarian Church, 1400 Lafayette St, Denver in Capitol Hill near Cheesman Park and Southeast Denver.
Who: Presented by CHUM (Capitol Hill United Ministries): There will be presentations on both sides of the issue before the film is shown, and further discussion after the film which will be facilitated by Pastor Mike Morran (First Unitarian Society of Denver) with Pastor Paul Carlson (Our Savior’s Lutheran Church), film producer Ravit Markus and Betty Aldworth – Amendment 64 and representatives from those who are against 64.
Where: First Unitarian Church, 1400 Lafayette St, Denver in Capitol Hill near Cheesman Park and Southeast Denver.
Who: Presented by CHUM (Capitol Hill United Ministries): There will be presentations on both sides of the issue before the film is shown, and further discussion after the film which will be facilitated by Pastor Mike Morran (First Unitarian Society of Denver) with Pastor Paul Carlson (Our Savior’s Lutheran Church), film producer Ravit Markus and Betty Aldworth – Amendment 64 and representatives from those who are against 64.
LEGALIZE IT was made in collaboration with Willie Nelson’s Luck Films – by award-winning filmmaking duo director Dan Katzir and producer Ravit Markus (Yiddish Theater: A Love Story, Out for Love…Be Back Shortly), with producer Lati Grobman (Righteous Kill, Run for the Money).
AFTER THE SCREENING THERE WAS ANOTHER ARTICLE:
Michigan Medical Marijuana Report
Legalize It: Notes from the Film Screening in Denver and the Power the Proposed Amendment 64
By Ben Horner
Denver, Colorado- Upon arriving at the Denver, one quickly realizes that this city is one of America’s strongest and most progressive. Magnificent snow capped mountains loom in the background of the impressive skyline. Modern skyscrapers and historical architecture stand tall against nature’s majestic backdrop. This is a cosmopolitan Mecca. More importantly, Colorado is one state that is leading the way in progressive marijuana law reform. Amendment 64, if passed by the voters, will fully legalize marijuana for personal use and cultivation on private property. In this proposed constitutional amendment there is framework of a regulatory system for retail locations, as well as guidelines for an excise tax of up to 15%. The first 40 million dollars of revenue received will be reserved for the general education fund. Polling data currently indicates the voters are strongly in favor of passing the amendment – 51% in favor, 42% against, and 7 yet undecided (According to the October 5th University of Denver poll.)
At the United Presbyterian Church located at 1400 Layfette Street, Christian ministers hosted an advanced screening of Legalize It, a film by Award-winning filmmaker Dan Katzir, which was produced by Ravit Markus and Lati Grobma. Following the documentary was a cordial debate with respect to Colorado’s Amendment 64. Although the movie documents California’s failed Prop 19 (Regulate Marijuana like Alcohol), the story really shows an inside picture of the internal struggle passing the people’s enacted initiatives and the toll it plays on the progressive leaders that spearhead these campaigns.
Legalize It focuses on the people directly behind Prop 19. The movie outlines the raw courage and personal sacrifice made, as well as the tremendous sacrifices and efforts made by the many others who volunteered for the campaign. Richard Lee spent all of the money he had generated from Oaksterdam University.
Unfortunately, the opposition was the very people that should have been their allies. An opposition group formed against Prop 19, which is based around some African-American Christian ministers, California’s cannabis growers, and the Mexican drug cartels. The growers and thug drug dealers resist due to fear of a shift of their share of the marijuana production market going to large corporate enterprises. Signs urging voters of Cali to “Vote NO on Prop 19” were placed at dispensaries around the state. The opposition dismayed the leaders of the campaign for Prop 19. They truly underestimated the greed factor and internal corruption within the movement. Did they not realize that the biggest victims in the drug war are cannabis consumers, children, and minorities? Inevitably, as most know, Prop 19 failed. This was due primarily to a lack in funding and unified grassroots support in addition to the misguided opposition.
To their credit, Richard Lee and all that fought to legalize marijuana pioneered the cause with new ideas and political strategies. The people involved changed public perception regarding marijuana and the drug war. They brought national spotlight to the issue. Although the advanced screening still had some preproduction work yet to be done, I would highly recommend the film.
Following the screening, representatives for and against Colorado’s Amendment 64 discussed the issue. Ben Cort, who a drug rehab counselor and represented the opposition against Prop 64, expressed his concerns. He opined and suggested that a constitutional amendment was not the right vehicle, as the particular language proposed in the amendment creates a federal supremacy issue. He expressed that his greatest concern is for the youth. He cited a Rand study which projects an increase in youths who use marijuana if legalized. Betty Aldworth, of the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, argued that there are approximately 10,000 pot-related offenses in the state last year, and not all of those were problematic. She pointed out that disparity of race and income ratios of those crimes are indicative of social injustice and inequality. Amsterdam has had huge growth of black market after barring coffee shops from sell marijuana to tourists. Ms. Aldworth countered that Colorado people should be able to make their own choices; the language of Amendment is flexible regarding regulation.
On November 6th, the citizens of Colorado will decide which point of view is to become policy. The contrast of professionalism in Colorado and Washington’s legalization of retail marijuana is sure to set the standard moving forward.
Tuesday, September 04, 2012
LEGALIZE IT screenings at local churches in Seattle
So our first sneak peek screenings of our new film just happened. First at Hempfest and then at local churches in Seattle.
CBS SEATTLE even reported on this story:
http://seattle.cbslocal.com/2012/08/13/seattle-hempfest-local-churches-to-show-previews-of-documentary-legalize-it/
So our first sneak peek screenings of our new film just happened. First at Hempfest and then at local churches in Seattle.
CBS SEATTLE even reported on this story:
http://seattle.cbslocal.com/2012/08/13/seattle-hempfest-local-churches-to-show-previews-of-documentary-legalize-it/
Seattle Hempfest, Local Churches to Show Previews of Documentary ‘Legalize It’
August 13, 2012 1:56 PM
Seattle Hempfest and three Seattle churches will host sneak previews of the definitive new pot documentary LEGALIZE IT, a socially conscious documentary on Prop 19 – the 2010 campaign to legalize marijuana in California.
Scenes from the film will be shown at Seattle Hempfest onSaturday, August 18 in the afternoon in the Hemposium followed by a panel discussion with the filmmakers and film participants. Participants include Judge Jim Gray (running mate of Presidential candidate Governor Gary Johnson), Dan Rush (Director, National Medical Cannabis & Hemp Division at UFCW) and Jodie Emery.
The entire film screens at Bethany United Church of Christ in Seattle on Friday, August 17 at 7:00pm with a filmmaker Q & A. Bethany UCC is located at 6230 Beacon Avenue South Seattle, WA 98108.
Pastor Carl Livingston (“Shoestrings and Bootstraps”) will present film selections at Kingdom Christian Center with the filmmakers in attendance on Sunday, August 19 at 11:00am. Kingdom CC is located at 800 SW 34th Street Renton, WA 98057.
The entire film screens at Woodinville Unitarian Universalist Churchon Sunday, August 19 at 6:00pm followed by a panel discussion with the filmmakers, film’s subjects (including Dan Rush and Amanda Rain), and Betty Taylor, former Chief of Police, St. Louis, MO and speaker for LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition). Representatives from New Approach Washington will be there to answer questions about Initiative 502, a Washington state initiative that legalizes and regulates marijuana for adults and is on the November 2012 general election ballot. Woodinville UUC is located at 19020 NE Woodinville Duvall Road Woodinville, WA 98072.
About LEGALIZE IT:
In collaboration with Willie Nelson’s Luck Films — award-winning filmmaking duo director Dan Katzir and producer Ravit Markus (Yiddish Theater: A Love Story, Out for Love … Be Back Shortly), with producer Lati Grobman (Righteous Kill, Run for the Money), captured the Prop 19 marijuana campaign in the new documentary.
In collaboration with Willie Nelson’s Luck Films — award-winning filmmaking duo director Dan Katzir and producer Ravit Markus (Yiddish Theater: A Love Story, Out for Love … Be Back Shortly), with producer Lati Grobman (Righteous Kill, Run for the Money), captured the Prop 19 marijuana campaign in the new documentary.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Next up... LA International Jewish Film Festival
UPDATE:
VIOLINS IN WARTIME- Won Second Prize in the audience award for best documentary!!!
Next up... The LA Jewish Film Festival
Thanks to Tom Tugend for the write up in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal:
Docs Shine at the Jewish Fest
VIOLINS IN WARTIME- Won Second Prize in the audience award for best documentary!!!
Next up... The LA Jewish Film Festival
Thanks to Tom Tugend for the write up in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal:
Docs Shine at the Jewish Fest
With Tony Curtis profile, docs shine at Jewish fest
BY TOM TUGEND
For its opening night on May 3, the Jewish Film Festival appropriately returns to one of Hollywood’s golden ages and to one of its most celebrated Jewish stars, Bernie Schwartz, aka Tony Curtis.
The documentary “Tony Curtis: Driven to Stardom” covers a lot of ground, much of it rocky, in 96 minutes.
Born in the Bronx to Hungarian-Jewish immigrant parents, Bernie had a difficult childhood. His schizophrenic mother beat him regularly, his father flitted from job to job, the family was evicted when it fell behind in the rent, and Bernie blamed himself for the accidental death of his younger brother.
His escape was the neighborhood movie theater, where his idols were Errol Flynn and Cary Grant, and the boy modeled himself on the Dead End Kids.
At 15, he falsified his age and enlisted in the Navy, serving in the Pacific on a submarine tender. After discharge, with the help of the GI Bill, Curtis enrolled in the theater workshop of The New School for Social Research.
His classmates were the likes of Marlon Brando and Harry Belafonte — the latter a lifelong friend and co-star of the color-barrier breaking “The Defiant Ones” — who narrates much of the documentary.
After a slow start in Hollywood, Curtis became a megastar and sex symbol of the 1950s and early ’60s; his bouffant hairstyle was imitated by Elvis Presley, James Dean and millions of teenage boys.
With changing tastes and advancing age, Curtis transformed himself from just a pretty boy into a character actor (“Sweet Smell of Success,” “Spartacus”), but, as time went on, his career arc turned south. He started freebasing cocaine, married and divorced five wives and had six children, who mostly disliked him.
Eventually, he sobered up and, in a lengthy interview, an older and wiser Curtis acknowledged his missteps and his lifelong addiction to fame. He died in 2010, at 85.
Bernie Schwartz’s Jewishness comes up in the film, such as the anti-Semitism of his Bronx childhood and the mandatory name change when he arrived in Hollywood (he first opted for “Anthony Adverse”), but it is not a major theme emphasized by director Ian Ayres.
Late in life, Curtis rediscovered his Hungarian-Jewish roots and spent generously to help restore the Great Synagogue in Budapest and other synagogues and cemeteries in Hungary.
“Tony Curtis: Driven to Stardom” screens at 8 p.m. on May 3 at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills, and reprises May 6 at 7 p.m. at Laemmle’s Town Center in Encino.
Israeli violin maker profiled in ‘Wartime’
Amnon Weinstein is a third-generation violin maker in Tel Aviv, a man with a rugged face, white shock of hair, handlebar mustache, and the heart and soul of “Violins in Wartime.”
“Wartime,” in this case, is the Second Lebanon War, starting in 2006, during which Haifa came under repeated rocket attacks and children in northern Israel were evacuated to safer parts of the country.
One mile south of the Lebanon border and six miles inland from the Mediterranean coast lies Kibbutz Eilon.
Founded in 1938 by immigrants from Poland, the kibbutz is now best known for its Keshet Eilon Music Center and annual master course, drawing 50 talented students from around the world.
Weinstein was one of the founders and is a continuing catalyst of Keshet Eilon, so when the fighting started at the border, he and musical director Shlomo Mintz were asked whether the three-week course should be called off.
No way, said Weinstein and Mintz, although they agreed to move out of rocket range to Beit Berl in central Israel. Soon the students arrived, as did 83-year-old master violinist Ida Haendel, who flew in from Miami to teach and perform.
But Weinstein was also wrestling with some personal problems. His son Avshi, carrying on the family trade into the fourth generation, had been called up for army duty, and his parents worry constantly about his safety.
The interplay of the war’s canon fire and the violin’s small voice is a curious one, but then the violin has deep roots in Jewish tradition.
One reason may be that during pogroms and expulsions, the violin could be easily carried and would always be in demand at weddings and bar mitzvahs. This may explain why 90 percent of all great violinists are Jews, as one musician maintains in the film.
The statement seems unduly boastful but may be validated by scanning such names as Heifetz, Menuhin, Stern, Perlman, Milstein, Zuckerman, Oistrakh, Shaham and many others.
Director, producer and writer of “Violins in Wartime” is multitalented Yael Katzir, a Tel Aviv native and UCLA graduate. Executive producers are her son, Dan Katzir, and Ravit Markus, who will participate in a Q-and-A exchange with the audience at the film’s screening on May 8 at 7:30 p.m. at Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills.
‘Rescuers’ pays tribute to World War II gentile diplomats
“The Rescuers” documents the powerful stories of 12 gentile diplomats from 11 countries, who, against the orders of their governments, and along with other envoys, helped save an estimated 200,000 European Jews during World War II.
The film is the work of three unlikely collaborators: The British historian Sir Martin Gilbert, biographer of Winston Churchill; Michael King, an African-American documentary filmmaker; and Stephanie Nyombayire, a Rwandan human rights activist, who lost more than 100 family members in her country’s genocide.
Among the rescuers, only the name of Sweden’s Raoul Wallenberg is widely known, but the group includes a member of the Nazi party and a Turkish Muslim, as well as two Britons, two Americans and former envoys from China, Japan, Poland, Holland, Switzerland, Portugal and Italy.
King is a film teacher and producer, best-known for his documentaries on inner-city teenagers. He won an Emmy for the PBS special “Bangin’, ” which dealt with youth violence.
It may be quite a stretch from Los Angeles’ mean streets to Holocaust rescuers, but the 53-year-old, dreadlocked King quickly makes the connection.
“I’ve always made socially conscious films and I have always been fascinated by the mystery of goodness,” he said.
“The story of the rescuers, who risked their careers by choosing God over their government, has universal significance,” he added. Besides, he added, “If Steven Spielberg can make ‘The Color Purple’ (on the lives of black women in the South), why can’t I make a film about the Holocaust?”
“The Rescuers” will screen May 8 at 7:30 p.m. at Laemmle’s Town Center in Encino. Director King will participate in a panel discussion.
A version of this article appeared in print.
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