Village at the End of the World
— “Village at the End of the World” was one of the first films shown at this year’s True/False Film Festival (http://truefalse.org/). It focuses on a year in the lives of four people living in a remote village in Greenland. The village has only 59 inhabitants and didn’t have electricity until 1988. There’s something comforting, innocent, and joyous about the town and its sense of community, where everyone helps everyone else and simple sustenance brings great joy. The film is beautiful and the village is beautiful, but there are signs that things are changing. Even as they work to keep their community from disappearing, the artifacts of their past are beginning to be replaced by the trappings of globalization.
[2012. 82 min. Directed by Sarah Gavron and David Katznelson.]
http://docgeeks.com/2012/10/23/lff-review-village-at-the-end-of-the-world/