Two filmmakers are hoping the last few days of fundraising via their Kickstarter page will bring success so their documentary on the largest commune ever in the U.S., known as The Farm and located in Summertown, Tennessee.
The film "American Commune" was made by two sisters who were born on The Farm, then their family relocated to California, and they decided to document their return to their origins:
Learn more about The Farm at their website:
The film "American Commune" was made by two sisters who were born on The Farm, then their family relocated to California, and they decided to document their return to their origins:
"When we left The Farm as kids and moved to Los Angeles, we were
catapulted into another world. We had never smelled perfume, eaten
meat, seen women with makeup or men without beards, and we’d hardly
watched
TV. We were taunted for
being “hippie kids” and did everything we could to blend in.
"The
impetus for
making AMERICAN COMMUNE was born out of our simple desire to understand
where
we came from. As luck would have it, working in the heart of
commercialism in New York City compelled us back to our roots. Suddenly,
we needed to learn about what our parents were doing in the backwoods
of Tennessee and how
they, along with hundreds of others, managed to create a massive
alternative
society out of no more than passion and an empty spot of land. As we
interviewed The Farm’s founders, our parents, and our childhood friends,
we
developed a greater respect for how hard everyone worked to realize
their
dream."
Learn more about The Farm at their website:
"The 150 present-day residents of The Farm have not
rested on their laurels, but continue to create and demonstrate
low-consumption, high-fulfillment lifestyles within a caring, socially
active community; to conceive, finance and launch daring business
enterprises that revolutionize the fields they compete in; to reduce
the burden of external government; to mitigate the negative
environmental, health and economic impacts of unsustainable global
patterns; to demonstrate and export a variety of integrated social
development strategies which can encourage diverse cultures worldwide
to bypass unhealthy transitions; and to become a living example of the
healthy and fulfilling interdependence of human and natural
communities."