Rooftop Films: The End of the Line on Gov. Isle (Event Over)
- When:Sat 8/22/09 (7:30PM)
- Where: Governor's Island
- Address: Governor's Island New York, NY Map
- Cost: $12
Tickets for this Event
-
General Admission - $12.00
Not Available No refunds. In the event of rain, the show will go on and audience is invited to sit under a tent on the beach. The Beach does have sand so we recommend bringing a blanket. Enjoy an evening of watching a film on the beach!
POSTPONED DUE TO HURRICANE BILL.
RESCHEDULED FOR FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 4TH.
SATURDAY AUGUST 22
Rooftop Films and The Fledgling Fund present
THE END OF THE LINE
(Rupert Murray | United Kingdom |
www.endoftheline.com | 90 min.)
Imagine an ocean without fish. Imagine your meals without seafood.
Imagine the global consequences.
Venue: The Beach at Governors Island
Address: On the beach along the water on Governors Island, just to the West
of the Ferry landing
Directions: Boats will leave throughout the evening beginning at 7pm from the
Battery Maritime Building Slip 7 on the Southern Tip of Manhattan,
located next to the Staten Island Ferry Terminal. Take the 1 at South Ferry, W at South Ferry, or 5 at Bowling
Green.
Rain: There is a covered tent area and the show goes on rain or shine.
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM: Live music presented by Sound Fix Records
9:00PM: Film
Tickets: $12 online at
www.rooftopfilms.com
Presented in partnership with:
The Fledgling Fund, Cinereach & New York magazine
|
THE BEACH AT GOVERNORS ISLAND
No refunds. In the event of rain, the show will go on and
audience is invited to sit under a tent on the beach. The Beach
does have sand so we recommend bringing a blanket. Enjoy an evening
of watching a film on the beach!
THE END OF THE LINE
(Rupert Murray | United Kingdom |
www.endoftheline.com | 90 min.)
The End of the Line is the first major feature documentary film revealing the impact
of overfishing on our oceans. In the film we see firsthand the
effects of our global love affair with fish as food. It examines
the imminent extinction of bluefin tuna, brought on by increasing
western demand for sushi; the impact on marine life resulting in
huge overpopulation of jellyfish; and the profound implications of
a future world with no fish that would bring certain mass
starvation.
Living in the U.S., we take for granted our very diverse diet, our
countless sources of nourishment. But throughout the world, more
than one billion people rely on fish as their primary source of
protein. For millennia this has not been a problem, as seafaring
and coastal communities have thought of the earth’s vast
oceans as an inexhaustible source of nutrition. But with the rapid
refinement of mass industrial fishing techniques, the widespread
assumption that the sea’s bounty has no bounds has led to
some alarming developments. Some environmental groups argue that as
much as 90% of the fish population in the entire world has been
fished out and consumed, and an international group of ecologists
and economists warn that the world may run out of seafood by 2048
threatening the most important source of food for more than 250
million people. If current trends are not reversed, the
over-fishing of the ocean could lead to ecological disaster and
mass starvation and malnutrition for hundreds of millions of
people—and this calamity may be approaching much more rapidly
than most of the world would ever imagine.
Filmed over two years,
The End of the Line follows the investigative reporter Charles Clover as he confronts
politicians and celebrity restaurateurs, who exhibit little regard
for the damage they are doing to the oceans. One of his allies is
the former tuna farmer turned whistleblower Roberto Mielgo –
on the trail of those destroying the world's magnificent bluefin
tuna population. Filmed across the world – from the Straits
of Gibraltar to the coasts of Senegal and Alaska to the Tokyo fish
market – featuring top scientists, indigenous fishermen and
fisheries enforcement officials,
The End of the Line is a wake-up call to the world.
But
The End of the Line is not merely an alarming documentation of ecological
irresponsibility. Working with organizations around the world to
promote responsible fishing,
The End of the Line explains that the responsibility lies squarely on consumers who
innocently buy endangered fish, politicians who ignore the advice
and pleas of scientists, fishermen who break quotas and fish
illegally, and the global fishing industry that is slow to react to
an impending disaster.
The End of the Line points to solutions that are simple and doable, but political will
and activism are crucial to solve this international problem. We
need to control fishing by reducing the number of fishing boats
across the world, protect large areas of the ocean through a
network of marine reserves off limits to fishing, and educate
consumers that they have a choice by purchasing fish from
independently certified sustainable fisheries.
Rooftop Films and The Fledgling Fund's screening of
The End of the Line is part of a global campaign for citizens to demand better marine
policies. Leading international environmental organizations are
lending their full support to the film.
The End of the Line will be released worldwide in 2009 using multiple formats and
venues including theaters, broadcast and cable television networks,
film festivals, online video campaigns, aquariums, museums and
special screenings for environmental and educational organizations.
We will be distributing wallet-sized fish guides to the audience
which help consumers to find out what fish they should and should
not be eating, the greater the chance that we can turn the tide of
destruction caused by over fishing.
Directed by Rupert Murray (
Unknown White Male),
The End of the Line is dynamic, visually stunning, and swiftly told. In addition to
alerting us to the emergency of over-fishing, the film also
captures the beauty of the ocean and its inhabitants, and there is
no better place for it to screen than along the beautiful Beach at
Governors Island.
Rooftop Films is a non-profit organization whose mission is to engage and inspire the diverse communities of New York City by showcasing the work of emerging filmmakers and musicians. In addition to our Summer Series – which takes place in unique outdoor venues every weekend throughout the summer – Rooftop provides grants to filmmakers, teaches media literacy and filmmaking to young people, rents equipment at low-cost to artists and non-profits, and produces new independent films. At Rooftop Films, we bring the underground outdoors. For more information and updates please visit our website at www.rooftopfilms.com.









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