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Monumental: David Brower's Fight for Wild America (2004)

Monumental: David Brower's Fight for Wild America (2004)

GENRESDocumentary
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Phillip BerryBarbara BrowerDavid BrowerMichael Cohen
DIRECTOR
Kelly Duane

SYNOPSICS

Monumental: David Brower's Fight for Wild America (2004) is a English movie. Kelly Duane has directed this movie. Phillip Berry,Barbara Brower,David Brower,Michael Cohen are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2004. Monumental: David Brower's Fight for Wild America (2004) is considered one of the best Documentary movie in India and around the world.

From the moment David Brower first witnessed the extraordinary beauty of the Yosemite Valley, his life was tied to the fight to preserve the American wilds for future generations. Not since John Muir had an American fought so hard, or been more successful, in protecting our natural heritage. His fiery dedication and activism helped inspire the modern day environmental movement. Explored is the beautiful, dramatic, and lyrical story of Brower and his colleagues' unrelenting campaigns--fought through lobbying, art, and hard hitting advertising-to-protect and establish some our most treasured national parks. At the center of the film are the themes that absorbed Brewer throughout his life: the threatened beauty of the American earth, the spiritual connection between humans and the great outdoors, and the moral obligation to preserve what is left of the world's natural wonders.

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Monumental: David Brower's Fight for Wild America (2004) Reviews

  • Hug a tree and then see this movie!!!

    SONNYK_USA2005-07-23

    For someone like myself, who spends most of his time in movie theaters, the natural world may hold little importance on a daily basis. That said, there is one scene in this film where the tallest existing redwood tree is cut down for pulp that caused me to flinch as a human being. You never really know your connectedness to the living world till you actually see it being destroyed. And that's where David Brower became a master of influence, by bringing Pres. John F. Kennedy, Lady Bird Johnson (then pres. LBJ's first lady), and other influential politicians into the natural world. When part of the Grand Canyon was set to be flooded Brower immediately started river-rafting tours of the canyon to show people why it shouldn't be flooded. And when the flooding advocates remarked that flooding the canyon would allow for boating, recreation, and easier access to the rim, Brower created the now-famous advertisement: 'Should we flood the Sistine Chapel to get closer to the the ceiling'. This documentary incorporated decades of footage shot by Brower during his long reign at the Sierra Club including several excerpts from feature documentaries made by Brower do drum up public support for the cause. By the end of this film it's undeniable that the natural world is worth more to us as human beings than it will as shopping malls, wood pulp, and dams. Check this out and be prepared - you may become an eco-activist when it's all over!

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  • An interesting look at the history of American conservation via its most prominent figure

    Lars-242005-01-26

    I found this movie quite interesting because, despite having considerable interest in conservation myself, I didn't know much about the history of the movement. Although the movie focuses specifically on David Brower, his actions play with or against the perspectives of the Sierra Club, the American government, various business interests, and the population at large, and one can trace the philosophical and political emergence of the movement as a whole. Brower himself seems to have led a fascinating life, and it's interesting to see how his experiences contributed to his convictions, while admiring his prodigious ability and insight. It's downright inspiring to see his confidence in an age when wilderness protection was not just unimportant, but undesirable. For me the most interesting parts were archival footage of films Brower and his opponents made which promote either conservation or development, but to a modern viewer more than anything express the tenor of the time which seems so different from our own. Also nice is the footage that is no longer possible to film: that of Glen Canyon, now submerged due to a compromise Brower made early in his career, which he never forgot and which shaped to a great extent where he went from there.

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