57 minutes Grades 7-12, College, Adult Produced by Rick Bacigalupi DVD Purchase $79, Rent $45 US Release Date: 2003 Copyright Date: 2003 DVD ISBN: 1-59458-444-3 VHS ISBN: 1-56029-982-7 Subjects American Studies Anthropology Community Environment Gardening Humanities Recreation Urban Studies Urban and Regional Planning Western US Awards and Festivals Best of Festival Award - Documentary, Berkeley Video & Film Festival Vermont International Film Festival Hazel Wolf Environmental Film Festival |
A Lot in Common (Short Version) A community garden grows community as well as food, flowers and consciousness.
Meet the neighbors: Grandpa Roosevelt and his grandson, Joan the single mom, Ruthe the psychic, and Amy the metal sculptor. They all have "A Lot in Common" when together they turn a vacant lot in Berkeley, CA into a blooming community garden full of lush native California vegetation, eco-friendly technology demonstrations, and outdoor artwork by local artists. They clash over political ideals, runaway pets and public art, yet in the end, they grow a community of neighbors. Interviews with urban planning visionary Jane Jacobs, PBS reporter/author Ray Suarez, environmentalist Paul Hawken, and Urban Habitat co-founder Carl Anthony, lend context and background to the discussion of the Commons. Landscape architect/psychologist Karl Linn who envisioned and orchestrated the creation of the gardens, provides on-going commentary. Reviews "A wonderful tribute to the visionary landscape architect Karl Linn and the energetic, creative community gardeners in Berkeley...An exciting learning resource." Ellen Kirby, president, American Community Gardening Association "A well-crafted, humanistic documentary that kept me thoroughly engaged!" Danny McGuire, executive producer, KQED-TV "A convincing argument for what Linn calls 'neighborhood commons' as well as a poignant story about friendship and community-building, with all the challenges and sweetness that implies." San Francisco Chronicle "Stunning images, captivating story,...a work filled with grace and artistry that goes right to the heart." Amy Blackstone, artist "Wonderful, touching, funny, and inspirational...it speaks to the very nature of why many of us think that community gardening brings people together in the best of ways." Beebo Turman, Berkeley Community Gardening Collaborative "Brilliant...inspired!" Adam Honigman, Clinton Community Garden, New York City "It's not just about a community garden in Berkeley, it's about the human community everywhere." Terence M. O'Driscoll, Station Manager, WNYE |