Saturday, June 29, 2024

Can’t Stop Change: Queer Climate Stories from the Florida Frontlines

Can’t Stop Change: Queer Climate Stories from the Florida Frontlines (No se para el cambio: Historias climáticas queer desde la primera línea de Florida), dir. Vanessa Raditz, Natalia Villarán-Quiñones, and Yarrow Koning, 2024 USA, in English and Spanish with open captions in both languages throughout, 97 min. 💖
Monday, June 24, 2024, 6:00 PM, New Parkway Theatre
available in the Digital Screening Room streaming encore

a middle-aged Miccosukee man gazes out at the Florida Everglades
Can’t Stop Change:
Queer Climate Stories
Florida is at the epicenter of the right-wing project to reshape America. Florida and Wisconsin are the testbeds for legislation put forward by ALEC, and in his laughable pursuit of the Presidential nomination, Governor Ron DeSantis went after LGBTQ+ (especially trans people and anyone standing in the way of Development, specifically including drill, baby, drill. In the face of that onslaught, some activists are holding their ground and trying to raise awareness and hopefully at some point turn the tide. Filmmakers Vanessa Raditz, Natalia Villarán-Quiñones, and Yarrow Koning interviewed activists in North Florida, Central Florida, and South Florida, plus some who felt they had to leave Florida for their own safety. They talked particularly about the intersection of climate change activism with communities marginalized by the white heteropatriarchy.

The result is a call to action and a beacon of hope, and draws clear connections between issues we often think of separately. For example, climate change has brought devastation to many parts of Florida in the form of stronger hurricanes, but the burden of that devastation has fallen disproportionately on Black and brown people, poor people, immigrants, and other people just trying to hang on. Climate is a “threat multiplier,” magnifying existing injustices. It’s a necessary film, and one that everyone should watch, definitely a MUST SEE, but unfortunately, the people who most need to see it will tune out pretty early on when they hear the radicals talk. They’re not exactly fiddling while Rome burns, but they’re playing 🙈🙉🙊 even as experts predict that as much as 60% of the land area of the city of Miami could be underwater by 2060.

• IMDb • Official website • Filmmaker • Twitter • Instagram • Facebook • preview • other • Historias climaticas queer desde la primera linea de Florida Natalian Villaran-Quinones

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