Intentional Communities Newsletter: October 30, 2012
Community Seekers DVD on Sale!
Of all the DVDs we carry about communities, Seeking the Good Life
in America is the most personal and
accessible. It doesn't feel like it has a heavy agenda―you
don't feel steered or preached at, nor is this an attempt at being an objective
eye analyzing the groups for study. Instead, you are invited to join filmmaker
Joy Truskowski on her journey of communities as a companion as she searches for
Home.
Truskowski essentially takes us on
a road trip with her, letting us glimpse what she glimpses about
three well-established Virginia communities: Acorn, Twin Oaks and Light Morning.
The film's style is unpretentious and light, with professional quality images,
and a personal narrator's voice. One of my favorite scenes has her turning the
camera on herself as she learns to chop wood. The combination of stubborn
grit and self-aware humor gives us a sense of the likable woman
behind the camera, and helps you experience her sometimes awkward shift into
a life that requires more active engagement. This is just one example of how
the educational aspect of the film slides down easily as a result of her choices.
It seems easy and casual, but I suspect what we are seeing is actually the result
of some careful crafting and thought on Truskowski's part.
One of the interesting choices she made as a filmmaker is to mainly
follow the people she interacted with most as a visitor, rather than emphasizing
interviews with key people in leadership; the "talking-heads-delivering-planned-profundity"
quotient is refreshingly low in this one. Instead, this is a film by
a community seeker, seen largely through the eyes of fellow community seekers:
visitors and interns get a large chunk of the air time. This makes for an especially
genuine look at what visiting communities is really like, and how people were
nurtured and challenged by each community in their early explorations stepping
out of more mainstream life into alternative culture.
The result is a film that feels like a community tour—stimulating,
heart-opening, thought provoking, and a little giddy. And somehow Truskowski
manages to make it fresh without feeling naive.
Sale price held over: $13.50, a 10%
discount from the regular price of $15.00.
More
DVD
titles available from Community Bookshelf.
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Shipping/handling on mail or phone orders
4.00 S/H for first item
1.00 S/H for each additional item
S/H prices shown are for Standard Mail postal delivery within US.
Community Bookshelf
RR 1 Box 156
Rutledge MO 63563
800-995-8342
bookshelf@ic.org
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http://store.ic.org/bookshelf
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