Tim Jackson Web
  • Home
  • Actor
  • DIRECTOR
  • Drums
  • Photo
  • Blog
  • FILM REVIEWS
  • Night Visitors
  • Misc
  • Videos
  • CV
  • Eight Days a Week: The Beatles on Tour
  • Sully
  • Christine
  • Loving
  • Blog
  • BLACK FILM 2016
  • BESTS OF 2016
  • 20th Century Women
  • SOME BANDS
  • Photograph
  • THE ASSISTANT
  • EMMA
  • First Cow
  • Video Essays
  • Tommaso
  • Driveways
  • Boston Films
  • Painted Bird
  • HELMUT NEWTON
  • Capital
  • Roy Cohn
  • Roger Stone
  • Lee Atwater
  • Herzog
  • Humankind
  • MISC.
  • BOOKS
  • Theater
  • Hitchcock Acting
  • Best of 2019
  • Best 2018
  • Best 2017
  • Best 2016
  • Best 2015
  • Best 2014
  • BEST 2013
  • White Tiger
  • New Mexican
  • Forgotten Bands
  • Summertime
  • Quiet Place 2
  • PInk
  • Killing of Two Lovers
  • Marriage
  • Bill Staines
  • Pleasure

Wampler's Ascent

2/20/2014

0 Comments

 
Buried among the Reelabilities: Boston Disabilities Film Festival screenings is the story of Steve Wampler, born with Cerebral Palsy, who commits to rappelling the face of the 3,000 foot granite monolith known as El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. It would make him the first person with a disability to accomplish such a feat.

The film serves as a fundraising tool on behalf of the Wampler Foundation, which provides wilderness experiences to physically disabled children nationwide. But it is also a moving, well-told story, a celebration of a truly remarkable exhibition of will power and physical endurance. Wampler was accompanied by two experienced guides — Tommy Thompson and David Lane — in his dizzying 6 day ascent, which required Wampler to pull up, inch-by-inch, a custom-made climbing chair (the equivalent of some 20,000 pull ups). The nimble camerawork by cinematographer Corey Rich jumps from the vast expanses of the cliff face and park landscapes to close-ups of Wampler as he pushes his body past cramps, hypothermia, and delirium from exhaustion. All the while the climb is being followed on Facebook and watched by crowds on the ground.  read more...

0 Comments

Getting Up: The Tempt One Story

2/20/2014

0 Comments

 
ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, afflicts the motor neurons that control voluntary muscle activity, leaving the body immobile though the brain remains active. In 2006, local filmmakers Jeanne Jordan and Steve Ascher documented the astounding efforts by the family of Stephen Heywood to find a cure for the disease in So Much So Fast. Heywood tragically died on November 26 of that year. Now, after its Slamdance festival premiere, comes Getting Up: The Tempt One Story, another tale that dramatizes an unbelievable triumph of spirit over adversity through the use of creativity and technology.  Tony “Tempt One” Quan was struck with the disease at the age of 34. At the time he was one of the leading graffiti artists and social activists in Los Angeles, excelling at a design approach that combined a Latino (or Cholo) style with New York graffiti influences  Read more ...

0 Comments
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.