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A Kalahari Family, Part II
Secondary Title:
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: End of the Road
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Filmmaker Name:
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John Marshall
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Film Length:
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60 min
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Film Year:
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2002
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Duration:
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46-75 min
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Decade:
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2000s
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Series:
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!Kung series
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Subtitle Language:
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English subtitles
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Color:
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color
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Region:
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Africa
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It is 1978, and in End of the Road, John Marshall is reunited with Toma's family. Like a majority of Ju/'hoansi, they have settled at Tjum!kui, an administrative post run by the South African government. They came looking for water, jobs and an easier life, but found poverty, malnutrition and violence. Desperate for a more stable existence, the family heads back to their traditional water hole, /Aotcha, with shovels, cattle, and plans to start farming.
About A Kalahari Family
A Kalahari Family is a five-part, six-hour series documenting 50 years in the lives of the Ju/'hoansi of southern Africa, from 1951 to 2000. These once independent hunter-gatherers experience dispossession, confinement to a homeland, and the chaos of war. Then as hope for Namibian independence and the end of apartheid grows, Ju/'hoansi fight to establish farming communities and reclaim their traditional lands. Through depiction of their efforts of the Ju/hoansi to participate as farmers in the contemporary economy and advocate for their rights to do so, the series challenges stereotypes of primitive and unchanging "bushmen."
The five films in the series are:
SELECTED SCREENINGS & AWARDS
Best Environmental TV Series, FICA - International Festival of Environmental Film & Video, Brazil, 2003
Special Prize: Homage to the Films of John Marshall; Bilan du Film Ethnographique, Paris, 2003
Grand Jury Award, Best in World Cinema, DC Independent Film Festival, Washington DC, 2003
Basil Wright Film Prize, RAI 8th Ethnographic Film Festival, England, 2003
Jury Award, Athens Film Festival, 2003
Environmental Anthropology Prize, CineEco Festival, Portugal, 2003
Best Film, Jury Award, XII International Festival of Ethnographical Films, Nuoro, Italy, 2004
Series Screening HistoryBest Environmental TV Series, FICA - International Festival of Environmental Film & Video, Brazil, 2003 Special Prize: Homage to the Films of John Marshall; Bilan du Film Ethnographique, Paris, 2003 Grand Jury Award , Best in World Cinema, DC Independent Film Festival, Washington DC, 2003 Basil Wright Film Prize, RAI 8th Ethnographic Film Festival, England, 2003 Jury Award, Athens Film Festival, 2003 Environmental Anthropology Prize, CineEco Festival, Portugal, 2003 Best Film, Jury Award, XII International Festival of Ethnographical Films, Nuoro, Italy, 2004 Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, 2002 Northeastern Anthropological Association Film Festival, Burlington, VT, 2003 Planet In Focus Film Festival, Toronto, 2003 Margaret Mead International Film Festival, NYC, 2002 Sithengi International Film Festival, Capetown, SA, 2002 African Film Festival, Seattle, 2003 Boston Premiere, Museum of Fine Arts, 2003 Archaeology Channel Film Festival, Oregon, 2003 University of Waterloo, Ontario, 2003 UCLA, Los Angeles, California, 2003 Beeld Voor Beeld, Ethnographic Film Festival, Amsterdam, 2003 ICAES Film Festival, Florence, Italy, 2003 International Environmental Film Festival, Turkey, 2003 Moondance Film Festival, Seahorse Award, 2003 5th Encounters South African International Documentary Festival, 2003 17th Parnu International Film Festival, Estonia, 2003 Documentary & Ethnographic Film Festival of Belo Horizonte, Brazil, 2003 Harvard Film Archive, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 2004 Göttingen International Film Festival, Germany, 2004 International Society of Ethnobiology International Congress, University of Kent, UK, 2004 Zimbabwe International Film Festival, 2004 Featured Filmmaker, Astra Film Festival, Romania, 2004 Interuniversity Ethnographic Film Festival of Montreal, 2005 Environmental Film Festival of Accra, Ghana, 2005 Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival, Greece, 2005
Ecocinema Festival, Athens, Greece, 2005
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