Bay Theatre shows Wendell Berry film

From staff reports

Crosshatch Center Art & Ecology, Leelanau Historical Society, Leland Township Library and Suttons Bay Bingham District Library are teaming up to host a screening of the award-winning Sundance documentary Look & See, a powerful cinematic portrait of Wendell Berry—farmer, activist, and undoubtedly one of America’s most significant living writers. The doors will open at Bay Community Theatre at 12:30 pm on Sunday, April 28, and the screening will begin at approximately 12:45pm. 

In 1965, Wendell Berry returned home to Henry County, where he bought a small farmhouse and began a life of farming, writing and teaching.  This lifelong relationship with the land and community would come to form the core of his prolific writings. A half century later Henry County, like many rural communities across America, has become a place of quiet ideological struggle. In the span of a generation, the agrarian virtues of simplicity, land stewardship, sustainable farming, local economies and rootedness to place have been replaced by a capital-intensive model of industrial agriculture characterized by machine labor, chemical fertilizers, soil erosion and debt—all of which have frayed the fabric of rural communities. Writing from a long wooden desk beneath a forty-paned window, Berry has watched this struggle unfold, becoming one of its most passionate and eloquent voices in defense of agrarian life.

Often called “a prophet for rural America,” Berry has long been a voice for the communities that are so often overlooked by the media. Filmmaker Laura Dunn skillfully weaves Berry’s poetic and prescient words with gorgeous cinematography and the testimonies of his family and neighbors, all of whom are being deeply affected by the industrial and economic changes to their agrarian way of life. “It’s a conversation that is more urgent now than ever, as we find ourselves in a deeply divided nation where urban consumers remain so completely disconnected from the rural producers whose work sustains their very lives,” says director Laura Dunn. “Wendell shows us with extraordinary sensitivity, just what fidelity to a place and to one’s own community can truly mean.”

After the film, Brad Kik, Co-Director of Crosshatch Center for Art & Ecology will moderate a panel discussion. The panel will feature local writer Teresa Scollon, Port Oneida descendent Jim Kelderhouse and Loma Farm’s Nic Thiesen. A $5 donation is suggested at the door.

For more information on the film and to view the trailer, visit:http://www.lookandseefilm.com.