Escape From Suburbia scrreening in Burlington ON

We did it, showed the new sequel to the world-changing End of Suburbia, to a crowd of 40+ at the library in Burlington last night. Greg Greene and Dara Rowland, producer as well as the editor (sorry don't have his name)came on the GO Train to be with us. The dvd will be available June 10th via www.escapefromsuburbia.com.

The conversation afterwards pointed up the emotional impact of the 90 minute documentary. People were distraught at the footage of the wanton destruction of the 14 acre urban garden in Los Angeles, to make way for a developer's warehouse. One of the 'starring' couples in the film is a gay couple from NYC who got the peak oil message and made a 180 degree turn to help build a movement to make neighbourhoods liveable under energy descent future. I think Tom was easily the most likeable guy in the whole piece, winning hearts when he said from a conference podium that peak oil is like a coming out for gay people; you expect to be rejected, even lose your job, but you have to do it, or go on living a double life.

Another viewer wrote this review. After Seeing the Documentary Screening: Escape from Suburbia
Tonite we saw a California Community Garden of several acres of urban green space bulldozed which is exactly opposite to where Global Warming needs to go... The producer and director joined us for a facilitated discussion after the movie. Please see the press release below for more details about the screening. The sequel everyone who saw End of Suburbia is waiting for... not just about technical energy questions,it is about the people who are trying to address them. Director Gregory Greene states, "These are people who are anticipating massive social changes based on energy becoming much more expensive. That is what we are going to look at. Their futures, our futures, could be vastly different depending on the success or failure of their projects. Very different indeed." People came to find out why the escape is a mindset, not a relocation.

Here is what we sent out as a press release.

We invite all of Burlington to come out and experience our future as energy and climate issues define the lifestyle options of the next decade. Come to Burlington Central Library tomorrow evening, to Centennial Hall, for the Ontario premier of this important film. The director and producer will be present to lead a discussion.

Two years in the making, Escape from Suburbia: Beyond the American Dream is the second film in a trilogy by director Gregory Greene. Greene's first feature film The End of Suburbia (2004) became an independent success, winning film festival awards, returning generous revenue for its producer, and capturing attention from such media as Oprah, The Colbert Report, The New York Times, the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star. Just as The End of Suburbia was the first film to introduce 'peak oil' in irreverent style, Escape from Suburbia explores new territory with bold humour. It weaves together David Suzuki's climate chaos with peaking fossil fuel production. It shows how real change is percolating up from the grassroots, not down from big government and corporate business.

In Escape from Suburbia we meet three characters whose very different lives converge on a single note: creating a more sustainable future for their families and communities as Hummer fever begins to power down.

Single mom Kate's MBA in Finance informs her political and environmental community work in Toronto. Phil trades in his valuable comic book collection for a new life based on permaculture and the production of public conferences that bring experts and community activists together in New York City. Portland based Jan and Carol have outgrown the constraints of their suburban home and cross the border to establish an eco village on Salt Spring Island in Canada.

Through the stories of these ordinary people, Escape from Suburbia Provides a sneak peak of a possible future where local economies flourish and communities thrive. But the news is not all shining solar panels and spinning wind turbines: James Howard Kunstler returns from The End of Suburbia with a few other familiar faces to state that "no amount of alternative energy will power Wall-Mart, Walt Disney World and run the interstate highway system." As the context and path for social change are imagined by credential laden thinkers and experts, Escape characters advance from theory and scepticism to active engagement. A small California town inventories its human and natural resources and plots a course toward sustainability.

Corporate and government solutions juxtapose what history and common sense tell us is beginning to happen: our civilization is about to face one of the most significant events in human history, the overhaul of a lifestyle completely predicated on cheap and abundant oil. Is it the fear of change, of a redefined future, that challenges the ability of the masses to embrace ingenuity? Is the American way of life, which is to say the American Dream, not negotiable? According to Kunstler, to cling to an outdated suburban model is to invite an arm-wrestle with reality. Escape from Suburbia is ultimately about a new reality that finds suburbia in a transformed universe.

Sustainable Burlington Citizens Group is people in this city who are concerned to act to reduce our local consumption of energy, particularly fossil fuels, and the effects on climate change. We prepare for a time when the energy we now take for granted is more scarce and costly. For more information, see the attached brochure.

Comments

Bytesmiths's picture

Where we are...

If anyone is interested, we're the couple in the film who were moving from the Portland suburb to an "ecovillage." We didn't end up at O.U.R. Ecovillage (which the film implies), but have formed a co-op and purchased a small farm as a "starter ecovillage" on an island in southwest BC.

We're doing pretty good with energy security right now, making biodiesel on-site and harvesting local deadwood for winter heat. (We leave every third tree standing for the woodpeckers and other critters.) We're still on-grid for electricity, but it's all hydropower here, and very cheap. That may or may not continue, but it makes it harder to justify making it a priority in the short term. We have a small stream with about 10 meters of drop from a former pond with a breeched dam. It may be next summer's project to turn that into nano-hydro. I estimate we can produce about 5kw during the winter.

Water security is next on our list. We're taking delivery of 80,000 liters of storage this month, and hope to be hooked up to a 1,200 square foot metal roof before the rainy season. We should be able to collect and store 1,000 liters for every centimeter of rain that falls.

Food security is longer in coming. We need to invest thousands into a perimeter deer fence before we can get serious about food. For now, we have some deer-resistant perennials (lavender, rosemary, sage) that we can use to generate income, eight fruit trees, and a tiny deer-fenced area for some winter greens.

Societal security isn't talked about much. The film implies that community and joining forces is important, but I don't think it is actually said. Either people form or join a community, or they "hole up" and try to go it on their own. I don't think "holing up" is going to work over the long haul, and part of our choosing an island was for the enhanced community aspect. People who live on islands have a sense of self-sufficiency. This is totally delusional, of course -- our island supplies only 3% of its own food -- but it's something that I'm hoping will make people pull together in times of crisis. Either way, once the locals discovered we were staying over the winter, and were going to do organic farming, we've been pretty much welcomed into the community, and have quickly developed a rich network of friends and business relationships. (We have better friends in one year of living here than we had in a decade of living in a Portland suburb!)

Our goal is to make this a Permaculture demonstration site, so we can attract more people (with some money!) and purchase a larger site of perhaps 100 acres, suitable for ten or more families. I'd be happy to correspond with anyone who has further interest. or see the link below for more information.

:::: Jan Steinman, Communication Steward, EcoReality. ::::

Shelby Tay's picture

Thanks for the comment!

Hi Jan,
Thanks for posting your comment. I took the liberty of reposting it in the forums under the Escape From Suburbia topic (http://www.relocalize.net/escape_from_suburbia#comment-2375).

Best of luck in establishing a Permaculture demonstration site! Thanks for sharing and keep up the great work.

cheers,
shelby

Relocalization Network Coordinator

lifetree76's picture

Kudos to SB

Kudos to you and SB Ian. We have many challenges ahead of us, the first is getting the word out to the communities in which we live. SB is clearly doing its part in educating the public. Keep up the effort, it is being noticed and appreciated.

If not you? Then who? If not now? When?

janetbeazlie's picture

Escape from Suburbia

Thanks for sharing your review of Escape from Suburbia with us. I look forward to seeing it. It's particularly exciting to hear that the movie follows the lives of 'ordinary' people coping with a Post Carbon future. All those involved in the relocalization network are beginnng to be represented in this film. People need to know the Peak Oil facts and figures, but for inspiration and empowerment, we all need to learn from each other positive responses to reality. Thanks to you in Burlington Ontario for leading the way and sharing the news.

Stisted's picture

Will California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, in Canada apologize?

Will California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, in Canada apologize for Green Community Terminated
Thank You for the Posting
http://www.topix.net/world/canada
http://www.topix.net/world/canada/2007/05/will-california-gov-arnold-sch...