Acquainted With the Night: Documentary Film Review



Feature-length documentary Acquainted with the Night (Markham Street Films, 2010) is a brilliantly executed examination of how humanity explores, embraces and attempts to protect the night. Shot in seven countries and eight languages, director Michael McNamara and co-producer Jen Recknagel analyze the universality of elements embodied in dusk to dawn traditions – curiosity and the quest to learn, ritual celebration, fear and adaptation, and from a Western research perspective the concern for the night’s adverse impact on the individual and society.

The movie is based on Christopher Dewdney’s book, Acquainted with the Night: Excursions through the World after Dark. While Dewdney breaks up the night into hourly vignettes based on science, myth and poetry, McNamara proceeds differently, showcasing key segments of time: daytime preparations, dusk, night-time activities, dawn and its aftermath.

In the film’s Prelude, individuals in a diversity of cultures and stations in life are shown preparing for darkness, foreshadowing what the night embodies for them:
• In the town of Atzompa, in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, a family walks along a dirt road with a wheelbarrow and arms full of flowers, destined for the cemetery, the beginning of its Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) rituals;
• Members of Astronomers Without Borders line up telescopes in Bhaktapur, Nepal, for viewing Jupiter and its moons;
• A team of researchers arrive at Arches National Park in Utah, to measure light pollution;
• On the Greek Island of Chios, villagers from two rival towns ready rockets and launching pads in preparation for a century – old, middle-of-the-night pyrotechnics competition;
• A group sets up high – power lamps in New York City near Ground Zero, for a tribute in lights;
• Artists at Parc des Buttes Chaumant in Paris, France, install their art, and lighting, for Nuit Blanche, a unique exhibition.

Introductions continue through Dusk, in Austin, Texas. Crowds gather before dark, eager to watch 1.5 million bats fly out from beneath an expansion bridge in a night-time feeding frenzy. This year the bats emerge unexpectedly early, but the film crew, on the ready, doesn’t miss a beat and catches the event as it happens.

Moving into The Night, we’re whisked worlds away, to a marketplace in Marrakech, Morocco. Children and adults alike are enthralled by the tales of a traditional storyteller, one of only two or three of his kind remaining. But storytelling is universal, as McNamara illustrates, taking the viewer from this Moroccan custom to Anglo- and French-Canadian homes in Canada where parents read the same bed-time story to their children, Love You Forever, in English and in French.

McNamara uses his characters, rather than a narrator, to thread his theses. Researcher Chad Moore, measuring light pollution with sophisticated instruments, decries the loss of the ability of Americans to witness true darkness. It “ties all people together across the planet,” states Moore. “We have to decide if it’s worth saving,” he asks rhetorically. Then in Nepal, as if to answer the question, we’re placed amongst astronomers encouraging onlookers to take a peak at the largest planet in the solar system. Curiosity, intrigue, marvel and the quest to learn about the night, each transcends culture and age.

Returning to North America, and The Night Shift, a long-haul trucker drives across Canada with her son, after dark, exposing us to the night’s working world – its allure, its danger, and its necessity. At the Sleep and Alertness Clinic in Toronto we learn of the afflictions which beset the night shift, and are told of modern-day disasters which have occurred during the middle-of-the-night as a result of human error – Chernobyl and Exxon Valdez are cited examples. If humanity must work throughout the night, as is suggested, how do we better adapt?

The dark side of earth’s most densely populated club district is revealed, under the watch of Toronto Police Department’s 52 Division. Another aspect of night shift work: patrolling nightly, and then rounding up mainly youthful revelers as they emerge from partying shortly after 2 a.m., high on drugs or a little too much to drink, in either case resulting in unruly conduct or violence. Detention and in some cases arrest follows; then finally the morning clean-up, Night’s Last Stand.

McNamara also illustrates how differently death is approached depending on societal mores. In the candle – lit Mexican cemetery his cinematographers capture the poignancy of an elderly couple lamenting the loss of their son, decades after his passing. He then switches to the somber spectacle of light near Ground Zero. On a subsequent night in the Mexican village, death is remembered no longer through solemnity, but now with comparsas – parades marked by reveling in costume, dance and song. McNamara then takes us to the pageantry of a Winter Solstice celebration at Toronto’s Kensington Market. The night is a catalyst for celebrating in similar, almost identical fashion, under dramatically distinct circumstances.

Particularly striking and thought-provoking contrasts occur within the context of McNamara taking us to a makeshift outdoor hockey rink illuminated by the full moon, then to beyond Yellowknife, where The Dene, one of Canada’s First Nation peoples, emerge from their teepees rejoicing the awe-inspiring Aurora Borealis, and yes, telling stories. Cut to Paris, where artificial light gives art a new appreciation, then to New York, where light pays homage to America’s fallen. It’s hard to resolve the conflict between utilizing and appreciating the night and all its wonder and beauty – a motive for its preservation – and perhaps just as valid, transforming and celebrating the night, which leads to its adulteration.

As dawn approaches, thousands of spent rockets are gathered on the Greek island, the Parisian art exhibit has lost its glimmer, the 9 / 11 lights are extinguished, the now exhausted Nepalese storyteller heads home, and the villagers of Atzompa depart through the cemetery arch, until next year’s Dia de los Muertos.

Acquainted with the Night takes the viewer on much more than a cross-cultural journey traversing the exotic and the familiar, and then back again. It opens our minds to a sampling of what most of us miss between going to bed, and arising for work the next day. It inevitably encourages many to re-evaluate an unnecessarily staid lifestyle, through examining a world not previously known to exist. It ensures that we expose our youth to more, yet at the same time cautions, and raises questions – with answers difficult to reconcile.

By: Alvin Starkman

About the Author:
Alvin Starkman is a consultant to documentary film production companies. He received his Masters in Social Anthropology in 1978. After teaching for a few years he attended Osgoode Hall Law School, thereafter embarking upon a career as a litigator. Alvin now resides in Oaxaca where he writes, leads personalized tours to the villages, markets, ruins and other sights, and operates Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast ( http://www.oaxacadream.com ), combining the comfort and service of a Oaxaca hotel with the lodging style of a quaint country inn.



Environmental Pollution and a Few Herbal Remedies



Environmental pollution is everywhere in our society, and it always has been.  But never had the planet been filled with so many pollutants and have them be so devastating to all life.  In our age, we have light, sound, chemical, and physical pollutants coming from a range of sources including the air, water and food we take to live.  In order to maintain health, we need to remove the pollutants from our bodies. 

Throughout time, we have been designed to rectify a certain degree of pollution to our bodies.  These natural defense mechanisms are present in all life forms from the smallest single celled organisms to us, humans.  But never before have these defense mechanisms been called upon to handle so many pollutants, and so many complex ones.

Light pollution is easily rectified.  We need only to remove ourselves from the vast amounts of artificial light and become exposed to natural light.  Sound pollution is easy as well.  We simply retreat to a quiet area or to one with pleasant, natural sounds.  Physical pollutants we simply wash away.  Chemical pollution are much harder to be rid of as they are often absorbed into our systems and cannot be easily removed.

Chemical pollutants affect the body in every way.  From simply blocking either physical or chemical processes in the body through being present to breaking down the physical makeup of our bodies, chemical pollutants can harm us in every way imaginable. 

For example, smog, a common feature in cities, contains particulates that build up in the lungs and form a barrier that blocks the air from reaching small passages in the lungs where oxygen is transferred.  A more sinister pollutant is artificial hormones found in most meats and sometimes fruit and vegetables.  These hormones infiltrate all bodily systems and substitute themselves for natural hormones.  They can induce or reduce natural reactions or cause an excess of other hormones to be produced.  Any change to the natural system is unhealthy.

The body is designed, however, to combat a certain amount of pollutants.  The liver is the best weapon our bodies have in this fight.  Keeping the liver cleared of an excess of toxins caused by chemical pollution is the easiest and perhaps best way to remove pollutants from our bodies.  It goes without saying that keeping those pollutants from ever entering our bodies is beyond best, but we cannot live in a glass bubble and keep everything out, we need to live our lives to the fullest.  And that is precisely what detoxification is all about.

Detoxification removes pollution and toxins that the body has accumulated and allows the organs of elimination to work better.  This process is helped by a number of factors including food, water and other liquids, herbs and medications. 

A very simple decoction for detoxification, which is also very effective, is a mixture of dandelion root and leaf and Echinacea.  Dandelion root stimulates the liver and gallbladder, substantially increasing the flow of bile.  Although it is not distinguished in American literature as a medicinal herb, European pharmacopeias have been using the herb for centuries.  Dandelion should not be used if there are problems with the digestive system or a sensitivity to lithium, the root may make the symptoms worse.

Dandelion leaf is known as the “pee the bed” name in England and other countries.  It is one of the better diuretics.  Unlike other diuretics, it replaces any potassium lost due to its rich potassium and other vitamin and mineral content.  It also helps with gallstones, jaundice, cirrhosis, dyspepsia with constipation, edema associated with high blood pressure and heart weakness, chronic joint and skin complaints, gout, eczema, psoriasis and acne.  In Chinese medicine is used for breast and lung tumors, mastitis, and abscesses, hepatitis and urinary tract infections. 

Echinacea is a great immune enhancer and blood cleasner.  Internally, it is used for skin diseases, fungal infections, septicemia, boils, abscesses, and infections.  It contains a substance called caffeic acid glycoside, which reacts with other substances in the body’s cells and facilitates the wound healing process.  Echinacea should not be used by people with immune disorders as it could progress the diseases or interfere with medications.

By: Christina Major

About the Author:
Christina Major is the owner and holistic nutritionist of Crystal Holistic Health Consulting. Crystal HHC offers nutritional consulting for most health problems including diabetes, cancer, heart disease, weight loss and childhood obesity. Clients receive a full lifestyle interview and personalized nutritional education. Crystal HHC also offers educational seminars on a variety of nutritional topics including eating habits, portion control and most health problems and how eating right can make them better. Check us out at http://www.CrystalHolisticHealth.com.



Vixen R130Sf Telescope Review



After a long drive up to Idaho this past weekend, I had the opportunity to play with one of my good friend’s Vixen R130Sf Telescope. Though astronomy isn’t a big hobby for my friend, he was more than willing to oblige my urge to try this reflector out, so long as I bought the beer.

My friend had the R130Sf mounted on a Vixen Porta II mount. His setup allowed us to be extremely mobile with this telescope. The telescope itself only weighs around 9 pounds and the mount was around 15 pounds. This is one of the most mobile reflecting telescope setups that I have had the pleasure of using. You can pretty much carry all the weight in one hand while packing a case of Fat Tire under your other arm, of course the beer is optional.

The Vixen R130Sf is a powerhouse for the price that you pay. It has a 130mm optical tube which allows up to 260x magnification. Considering the fact this Vixen’s least expensive reflector, the amount of power it puts out is astonishing.

The light gathering power is right around 345x, which was mind blowing to me. We were up in Sun Valley, Idaho where light pollution is minimal, and the moon isn’t coming up until later in the AM hours.

The views we got from this telescope took my breath away. I have used a fair share of “price point” telescopes from different brands, and this particular reflector seems to be the best of them all.

This telescope is compatible with most mounts that are out there, but I would recommend for any amateurs or beginners to grab it along with the Porta II, as it it’s a great fit.

For those that may be buying the Vixen R130Sf Telescope as an upgrade to something they were using previously, you may want to consider purchasing it with the Vixen GP2 Mount, as it is compatible with the Vixens Starbook S Controller. The Starbook S Controller is a great toy for those who are serious about exploring the sky. If you are a seasoned amateur looking to grab a new telescope and mount, you may want to plan ahead.

I’m giving the Vixen R130Sf Telescope two thumbs up as a pseudo price point telescope. It fits the needs of any beginner or amateur astronomer and is very affordable.

By: Kirby Yardley

About the Author:
Article by Kirby Yardley

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