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Director: Emma Hindley
Cast: Guinevere Turner, Rose Troche, Sharon Pollack, Alex Sichel
Looks at the emergence of lesbian feature filmmakers in the U.S. and how they produce films on a small budget. Interviews with directors Rose Troche (Go Fish); Sharon Pollack (Everything Relative); and Alex Sichel (All Over Me) as well as producer Dolly Hall, executive producer Christine Vachon and writers Sylvia Sichel and Guinevere Turner.
Critical Reception & Ratings
Zero Budget, a 1996 documentary directed by Emma Hindley, examines the emergence of lesbian feature filmmakers in the U.S. and how they produce films on a small budget. The film features interviews with directors like Rose Troche, Sharon Pollack, and Alex Sichel, as well as producers and writers in the independent film scene.
Why you might like this:
Fans of independent documentaries and the emergence of lesbian filmmaking in the 1990s will appreciate the intimate, behind-the-scenes look at directors like Rose Troche and Sharon Pollack in this 1996 film directed by Emma Hindley.
Natural farming, also referred to as "the Fukuoka Method", "the natural way of farming", or "do-nothing farming", is an ecological farming approach established by Masanobu Fukuoka (1913–2008). Fukuoka, a Japanese farmer and philosopher, introduced the term in his 1975 book The One-Straw Revolution. The title refers not to lack of effort, but to the avoidance of manufactured inputs and equipment. Natural farming is related to fertility farming, organic farming, sustainable agriculture, agroecology, agroforestry, ecoagriculture and permaculture, but should be distinguished from biodynamic agriculture.
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