Hemp World magazine,
Mari Kane, Publisher
Summer
'98 Volume 4, Issue 1
Summer Hemp Videos
by Rose Ann Fuhrman
Produced
by the HempenRoad Film Project
The
Hempen Road - produced, written and narrated by Dave Olson - is an earnest, down-home
movie that you can "send your grandma or congressperson," as the video
jacket suggests. If your congressperson is captured by homespun sincerity, he
or she might watch and learn something. But careful about giving Grandma the impression
she isn't hip; some grandmas are among our most steadfast and knowledgeable activists.
In The Hempen Road, you'll
travel the back roads and main roads of Southwest Canada and the Northwest US
and be invited behind the scenes to: meet Ian Hunter -- hemp store owner and mayoral
candidate in BC; enter kitchens where hemp seeds are a staple; visit Odette Kalman
at Ecosource Paper in Victoria; watch as hemp fiber for weaving is dipped into
natural indigo dye - it comes out green and turns deep blue as the air hits it,
and lots more.
Well into
the video the tone becomes less folksy - more political and controversial. Dennis
Peron's statement that all marijuana use is medical is quite a departure from
the laid-back ramble through the Northwest.
In
a segment on the Commercial and Industrial Hemp Symposium in Vancouver, visual
clips from Hemp for Victory and pertinent modern images are inserted at appropriate
times to complement the information being delivered by impressive international
speakers at the symposium. The speakers are engaging and the video editing is
effective - when you check it out, be thinking of who you can show it to.
There's
a surprise around every bend on this trip: on-the-edge jazz backs interesting
visual effects of melded images. In contrast to innovative work, there are the
too fast video shots like we've all taken, and there's at least one moment that
is downright poetic: referring to nuclear power plants, oil rigs, and clear cuts
as, "Broken promises to the land, the workers, and ourselves."
A
sense of humor extends to the credits, which declare that: "All people appearing
in the film are real. Any similarity to anyone else, living or dead, is not our
problem. Individual comments do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Hempenroad
film project, but they might."
reprinted from HempWorld
magazine