"Everyone likes food and movies," says Celeste Gray, the force behind the Asheville Food and Environmental Film Festival. The inaugural AFEFF, which Gray intends to make into yet another yearly Asheville celebration, will span four days, and includes a bounty of film screenings, Q-and-As and various food events held at venues ranging from local farms to breweries.
The films featured at the festival, says Gray, run the gamut of topics from the science and technology of food, to raising urban hens, such as what’s shown in the UNCA student-produced film, We Still Lay.
"All of the films point out how our daily choices not only affect our health and the environment, but how something happening in another part of the world can affect a water system in a particular region," says Gray. “They focus on interrelationships worldwide, and how we can actually make a difference together."
Fresh Schedule
AFEFF Schedule (see freshasheville.blogspot.com for more detailed information):
Wednesday, September 22:
6 – 10 p.m.
Opening farm dinner at Eyes of Blue (a 40-acre farm 10 minutes north of downtown Asheville).
Benefit for food and environmental student organizations at UNCA and the launch of UNCA's Slow Food chapter.
Watch the opening films of the AFEFF, YERT (Your Environmental Road Trip) and Carbon Nation.
Live music by The Swayback Sisters and dinner at the farm with a focus on locally produced foods.
Thursday, September 23:
12:30 – 1:30 p.m. At UNCA
We Still Lay: a film by Warren Wilson College Students about Asheville's Urban Chicken Movement.
Permaculture Chickening: Raising Urban Hens as a Political Act. Discussion led by Cathy Williams, urban chicken enthusiast.
7 – 9 p.m. at UNCA Humanities Lecture Hall
Bag It: a film by Suzan Beraza.
A less plastic life: Q&A with Suzan Beraza.
9:15 – 10:45 p.m. at UNCA Humanities Lecture Hall.
SOLA: Louisiana Water Stories: a film by Jon Bowermaster.
Q&A with WNC Alliance.
7 – 8:30 p.m. at Asheville Pizza & Brewing Company
Home: a film by Ursula Meier.
8:45 – 9:35 p.m. at Asheville Pizza & Brewing Company
Food Design: a Film by Martin Hablesreiter and Sonja Stummerer.
9:45 – 11 p.m. at Asheville Pizza & Brewing Company
Sweet Crude: a film about the Niger Delta.
11 p.m. – 12:15 a.m. at Asheville Pizza & Brewing Company
Meat the Truth with Marianne Thieme of the Dutch Parliament.
Friday, September 24
5:30 – 6:50 p.m. at UNCA Highsmith Union Grotto
Local Foods demo and tasting with Chef Jeremiah of UNCA Dining Services.
(Free event).
7 – 8:45pm at UNCA Highsmith Alumni Hall
Fresh: a film by Ana Sophia Joanes.
A Fresh Food Movement: Q&A by Ashevillage Institute.
9 – 10 p.m. at UNCA Highsmith Union Alumni Hall
Dive!: a film by Jeremy Seifert.
Q&A/presentation by Danny's Dumpster.
7:45 – 8:45 p.m. at the Wedge
A Necessary Ruin: The Story of Buckminster Fuller.
Union Tank Car Dome a film by Evan Mather.
Special guest: David McConville of The Buckminster Fuller Institute.
9 -10:30 p.m. at the Wedge
The Green House: Design it. Build it. Live it, a film by Liv Violette and Jason Scadron.
Sunday, September 25
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. at Earth Fare Community Center, Westgate.
Slow Food Asheville local foods cooking demo and tasting.
12:30 – 2:30 p.m. at Earth Fare Community Center Westgate
What's on Your Plate?: A film by Catherine Gund about kids and food politics.
Lunch: a film exploring the effects of the National School Lunch Program on America’s children today in schools.
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. at the LAB
Full Signal: a film by Talal Jabari about electromagnetic pollution caused by cell phones and towers.
12:45 -1:40 p.m. at the LAB
Seeds of Hunger: a film by Yves Billy & Richard Prost.
filmed in Africa, China, Latin America and the U.S.
Q&A with Bountiful Cities Project.
2 -3 p.m. at the LAB
Dive! Living off America's Waste: a film by Jeremy Seifert.
Q&A and presentation by Danny's Dumpster.
3:15 – 5:15 p.m. at the LAB
Bag It: a film by Suzan Beraza
Living a life less plastic: Q&A with Suzan Beraza
6 – 10 p.m.
AFEFF Closing: Eyes of Blue farm dinner
An open-air, fully catered farm dinner at Eyes of Blue Farm. Dine with the attending directors and producers of the film selection. The menu will include as many ingredients as possible from within a 100-mile radius.
Though the central concept may seem a little serious — and the subject matter is indeed important — Gray maintains that there is plenty of fun to be had. "The core group of films uses a lot of humor," she says. "Sure, they're dealing with serious topics, but delivering the message with humor is really important. It's not 'Oh gosh, we're doomed.' It's more light, solution-oriented and inspiring."
One of the featured movies, Fresh, focuses on the problems and consequences of our current food systems, as well as the people working to come up with solutions — much like Celeste Gray is trying to do with the AFEFF.
The director of Fresh, Ana Joanes, says that her movie is intended to start "a delicious revolution."
"We love to eat food that's fresh, artisanal, that has good flavor," says Joanes. "Often, when you get incredibly good food, you also get food that's nutritious, that heals the environment, protects biodiversity and supports your local community," she explains. "So in one swoop, you get something that's good for yourself, that's actually pleasurable in many ways. This is really what Fresh is about." In other words, she says, our actions, like what we choose to eat, have an impact beyond our plate.
Gray, says Joanes, screened Fresh in Asheville earlier this year, and it was received quite well. "She ended up thinking, 'Let's make this part of something bigger — a bigger community event that can take place in Asheville once a year that people would look forward to.' It's really her energy that turned one Fresh screening into this incredible festival," Joanes explains. "It's exciting for us, because we created Fresh with the hope that it would become a platform to turn inspiration into action … and to generate an energy that is helping to transform our communities. And I've heard wonderful things about Asheville, that it's an incredible community."
Gray says that the concept of the festival — a focus on solution-oriented and healthy living — is one that's always been near and dear to her heart. She grew up snacking on her grandparents’ farm-fresh veggies, and attributes her mother's cancer survival to a healthy lifestyle.
Gray also adds that the film festival is for everyone. This isn't a healthy-living festival for the self-righteous elite (my words, not hers). "I do believe that there's enough diversity that it will appeal to a large group of people," she says. "Everyone's invited. All of the films effect everyone worldwide — not a certain class of people."
One of the great things about this event, she points out, is that the films aren't available elsewhere. "It's a unique opportunity to see these screenings, plus some of the directors and producers will be attending and leading Q-and-As," says Gray.
The AFEFF will kick off with a catered dinner event at at Eyes of Blue Farm, 10 minutes north of downtown. Sundance Power Systems will provide Asheville’s first and only "Solar Cinema" for a carbon-neutral farm screening of the first of the films. A biodiesel-fueled shuttle will be provided, as will a local-centric menu from local restaurants like Carmel's, Cucina 24, Bouchon and Modesto. Four days of screenings across town will follow in various venues across town. For the full schedule, see page 47.
For more information, visit freshasheville.com
— Mackensy Lunsford can be reached at food@mountainx.com
1 thought on “Fresh Asheville”
Here’s the trailer for “Meat the Truth,” which will be shown at 11 p.m. on Thursday night, Sept. 23, at Asheville Pizza and Brewing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Z-upjfFCA4