Wednesday, December 31, 2014

FFF's New Year starts January 2nd!

Happy last day of 2014!
Please join First Friday Films to ring in the New Year on Friday, January 2nd at 6:30pm at American Memorial Park. We will be showing the family-friendly film Dirt!
 
DIRT! The Movie–narrated by Jaime Lee Curtis–brings to life the environmental, economic, social and political impact that the soil has. It shares the stories of experts from all over the world who study and are able to harness the beauty and power of a respectful and mutually beneficial relationship with soil.

But more than the film and the lessons that it teaches, DIRT! The Movie is a call to action. “When humans arrived 2 million years ago, everything changed for dirt. And from that moment on, the fate of dirt and humans has been intimately linked.”
How can you affect that relationship for the better?


First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 90 minutes.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Check out the Marianas Trench this Friday!



First Friday Films is featuring the Marianas Trench in its program this Friday, December 5th at 6:30pm at American Memorial Park.

The public is invited to join us for two free films this Friday. First, travel with us on the “First Voyage to the Marianas Trench Marine National Monument” with a local film produced by APASEEM in 2012 about the expedition to the newly created monument. Then we will show episode 3 from CBC’s One Ocean series entitled Mysteries of the Deep.

Mysteries of the Deep joins a team of scientists, ranging from biologists to volcanologists on an international expedition to the Mariana Arc. Every day they make new discoveries about the outlandish deep-sea dwellers and dramatic underwater volcanoes. But even as scientists catalog these new findings, industrial fisheries are also delving further into deep waters in an attempt to replace diminishing fish stocks along the coasts. Can technology help us understand this little-known world before it’s altered further?

Before the film, representatives from the CNMI’s Marine Monitoring Team will share photos, stories and research from their 2014 expeditions to the Northern Islands, including parts of the Marianas Trench Marine National Monument.

First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. These particular films are sponsored by APASEEM and BECQ. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 90 minutes.

Monday, November 3, 2014

"Shattered Sky" on Friday, November 7th



All audiences are invited to the FREE showing of the film “Shattered Sky” at American Memorial Park on Friday, November 7th at 6:30pm. In this month of Thanksgiving, the film reminds us how the world solved the crisis of the hole in the ozone layer and looks at how we can apply the same solutions to act on climate change.

Thirty years ago, scientists reported a hole in the ozone layer “the size of North America” which turned out to the be the biggest environmental crisis ever seen. The culprit was CFC’s, prevalent in billions of dollars worth of products like refrigeration and air-conditioning products that had revolutionized the American way of life. Doctors forecast skyrocketing rates of cancer. The stakes were “life as we know it.” But business remained bitterly opposed and policiticians were initially slow to act. For the first time in film, “Shattered Sky” goes inside the ozone crisis to explore how America led the world to a solution. It inspires viewers toward the same can-do spirit on climate change today.

First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. This particular film is sponsored by BECQ. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 60 minutes.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

"Birth of an Ocean" this Friday, Oct 3rd



First Friday Films will be showing a new episode of the “One Ocean” series, entitled Birth of an Ocean. The film will be shown for free on Friday, October 3rd  at 6:30pm in the American Memorial Park theatre. 

More than four billion years ago, the most important event in Earth’s history took place – the ocean was born. It completely trasnformed the planet, creating a watery oasis that gave rise to the air we breathe, our climate, and a stunning array of life, including the critical species that first crawled out of the sea to inhabit land. The ocean is what transformed Earth into the liveable, blue planet it is today. As Birth of an Ocean reveals, we are just beginning to understand the complexity of the ocean and the immense influence it has on the planet and our own survival.

First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. This particular film is sponsored by BECQ. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 90 minutes.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

What's on Your Plate?: Start off the school year knowing about school nutrition

In honor of the start of the school year, First Friday Films presents What’s on Your Plate?, a documentary about two school kids who try to understand how to eat healthy. What’s on Your Plate? will be shown at American Memorial Park at 6:30pm on Friday, September 5th.

Filmed over the course of one year, the film follows two eleven-year-old kids in New York City  as they explore their place in the food chair. Sadie and Safiyah take a close look at food systems in New York City and its surrounding areas. The girls address questions regarding the origin of the food they eat, how it’s cultivated, how many miles it travels from the harvest to their plate, how it’s prepared, who prepares it, and what is done afterwards with the packaging and leftovers.

Before the film, Kaisa Anderson, a registered dietician and nutritionist with the CNMI Public School System will talk about the school food program in the CNMI, including challenges and changes that have been made over the past few years as school nutrition becomes a focus across the United States and its territories. This event is ideal for parents and students to learn a little more about school nutrition and for anyone who is interested in where food comes from and how our food chains work.

First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. This particular film is sponsored by BECQ. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 90 minutes. 

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Bag It kicks off Plastic Bag Challenge on August 1st, 6:30pm

First Friday Films is partnering with the Micronesia Islands Nature Alliance (MINA) to show the film Bag It on Friday, August 1st at 6:30pm at American Memorial Park, kicking off MINA’s Plastic Bag Challenge.  

The movie Bag It asks “Is your life too plastic?” It follows the life of an average man when he decides to make a resolution to stop using plastic bags at the grocery store. Little does he know, this simple descision will change his life completely. Realizing that over-consumption of plastic has started to catch up with us, he looks at what we can do to fix it.

Before the film, Becky Furey from MINA will talk about the Plastic Bag Challenge  -- an outreach campaign that aims to reduce the use of plastic bags through the promotion of more sustainable options, such as reusable shopping bags and boxes. Across the United States and the Pacific, many places are starting to phase out plastic bags in favor of alternatives, and MINA is leading that charge for the CNMI. The Micronesia Islands Nature Alliance is an environmental conservation non-profit organization that works to sustain the natural environment and ensure the island way of life.

First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. This particular film is sponsored by MINA. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 90 minutes. 

Monday, June 30, 2014

FFF moved to July 11th -- Blue Planet: Coral Seas

First Friday Films will be showing the Coral Seas episode of the BBC’s The Blue Planet series for free at American Memorial Park on Friday, July 11th at 6:30pm. This is one week later than the normal First Friday Films schedule due to conflict with the 4th of July holiday.

Amazingly beautiful and complex, coral reefs develop from humble beginnings. Tiny coral larvae float through the seas and settle, growing into intricate and fragile coral reefs inch-by-inch over hundreds of years. As the community flourishes, animals develop relationships with one another and such a place can feature a huge variety of ocean life.

The Blue Planet is a British nature documentary series created and produced by the BBC. It is one of the first ever comprehensive series on the natural history of the world’s oceans. Dozens of videographers worked for years on The Blue Planet series and the Coral Seas episode displays fantastic footage of what is happening on reefs just those surrounding the CNMI.

Before the film, Greg Moretti of the Micronesia Islands Nature Alliance will speak about his underwater photography experiences on Saipan’s reefs. Community members can also learn about the upcoming coral spawning event around Saipan that will be happening near the new moon in July.
First Friday Films is a partnership between American Memorial Park, the Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality and the Humanities Council with support from other organizations and individuals. As always, our film events are free and open to the public. This event will run approximately 60 minutes.