First Kill
US, 2001, 35mm, color, 52 min.
First Kill explores the complexities of war in an astonishing and disconcerting way. Through interviews with Vietnam veterans, director Coco Schrijber reveals the horrors of war as well as its vicious thrills, or what one former war correspondent refers to as “the upside of war.” Though most of the veterans acknowledge regret and remorse over their actions, this documentary recognizes the ever-present capacity for human beings to commit disturbing acts of violence.
PRECEDED BY
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The Draft Card Burner
Directed by Hilary Harris.
US, 1966, 16mm, black & white, silent, 7 min.
The film documents a series of demonstrations opposing the draft which were held in New York City in 1965.
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Peace Pickets Arrested for Disturbing the Peace
Directed by Leonard Henny.
US, 1968, 16mm, color, 7 min.
This documentary depicts the preparations for and the development of the October 1967 non-violent, anti-draft demonstration at the Oakland Induction Center that led to the arrest of folk singer Joan Baez and twenty pacifists.
Over the course of five years, experimental filmmaker Carolee Schneeman compiled this collection of images of atrocity in Vietnam using international magazines and newspapers as her source. Schneeman’s striking imagery is made all the more powerful by James Tenney’s inventive soundscape, which combines religious chants, Bach, and 1960s pop hits.