A SMALL ACT/NEW FILM
http://www.asmallact.com/film.php
When Hilde Back sponsored a
young, rural Kenyan student, she thought nothing of it. She certainly
never expected to hear from him, but years later she does. Now a
Harvard graduate and a Human Rights Lawyer for the United Nations,
Chris Mburu decides to find the stranger that changed his
life. Inspired by her generosity, he starts a scholarship program
of his own and names it for his former benefactor.
The top students in Mukubu primary school are in the exact same
situation as Chris once was. They are bright, but can't afford to pay
school fees. With the creation of Chris' fund, these students have new
hope. But the program is small; how many will qualify for a
scholarship?
Using a strong narrative, the
film interweaves seemingly separate lives into a cohesive whole. With
clarity and grace, A SMALL ACT, bears witness to the ripple effect a
single action can create.
One day in the mid
1970s, a pre-school teacher living in Sweden named Hilde Back decided
to sponsor an African student. Hilde, a Holocaust survivor whose
parents were killed in the camps, lived modestly as a refugee in the
safe haven of Sweden. Every month she put a few dollars in an envelope
and sent it to a Kenyan boy named Chris Mburu. This was enough to get
Chris through school. (In Kenya, at the time Chris was in school,
students had to pay for their primary and secondary school education.
Today, primary is free in Kenya, but secondary still costs.) Chris was
inspired by his mysterious benefactor who lived so far away. Not only
did he become a star student, he moved on from his village to
eventually graduate from Harvard Law School. He became a United Nations human rights
advocate, a post he holds today.
A Small Act
Can Change the World
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lee-schneider/a-small-act-can-change-th_b_634064.html
One small act -- a
couple of bucks -- changed his life. But it gets better. Chris decided
to honor the benefactor he had never met. He established
the Hilde Back
Education Fund
to sponsor more Kenyan students, to improve more young lives.
Eventually, he tracked down the 80-year-old Back and brought her to
Africa to see the results of her generosity.
It sounds a little like fiction, but this is the true story told
in A Small
Act, a
documentary directed by Jennifer Arnold. Jennifer attended the
University of Nairobi with Chris's cousin, and experienced firsthand
what Kenya was like. She wanted others to have the experience of a
prosperous Kenya with a sizable middle class. She set out to make a
film about that and discovered even more.
"My mom was Peace Corps. I come from a long tradition in my
family of, 'just do what you can to help other people.' We all believe
in that in my family. Small actions totally make a difference." -
Jennifer Arnold
Her film was initially intended to simply show a balanced view of
Africa. Along the way, she discovered Chris and Hilde. As their story
unfolded before her lens, Jennifer filmed in villages without
electricity, using only battery power for the camera, and sometimes
couldn't understand what was being said. (She speaks some Swahili, but
many of the people she filmed spoke Kikiuyu.)
A Small
Act was accepted
at Sundance, and while it screened there with Chris and Hilde in
attendance, Jennifer tells this remarkable story: "At Sundance,
audience members started handing Chris and Hilde and us checks and
cash. They were all donations to the fund. They donated $90,000 over
the course of 10 days at Sundance. Then a philanthropist who saw the
film just donated a quarter million dollars, just based off seeing the
film," she told me.
What the film has
taught her is this simple truth: If you feel like you can make a
positive change once, you will do it again.
Even the Tiniest
Actions Can Change Entire Lives
By NEIL GENZLINGER
Published: October
28, 2010
http://movies.nytimes.com/2010/10/29/movies/29small.html?scp=1&sq=a%20small%20act&st=cse
"A Small
Act"
would have been a pretty good documentary even if things had merely
gone the way the filmmakers probably envisioned at the start of the
project. But when unforeseen developments rewrote the script, as it
were, the film took on a depth that made it all the more
remarkable.
Jennifer
Arnold, the
director, sets out to tell the story of Chris Mburu, who as a child in
a poor village in Kenya was probably destined for a life of hardship
until a woman in Sweden named Hilde Back, participating in a
sponsorship program, provided the modest amount of money needed to
keep him in school. Mr. Mburu ended up with a degree from Harvard and
a job with the United Nations investigating human-rights
abuses.
The film cuts
between two stories: Mr. Mburu's attempt to find Ms. Back and his
efforts to start his own sponsorship fund for Kenyan youths and choose
the first beneficiaries. Ms. Back turns out to have an unexpected
personal story that makes their connection that much more stirring.
But Mr. Mburu's philanthropic plan, which is pegged to students'
performance on a nationwide test, is dealt a setback. And while all
this is going on, Kenya erupts in violence after the disputed 2008
elections.
The film couldn't
be more heartening - yes, individual actions do make a difference. But
it's bittersweet as well. You can't help wondering about all the
children who don't get tapped on the shoulder by the hand of
fate.
A SMALL
ACT
.
Written and
directed by Jennifer Arnold; director of photography, Patti Lee;
edited by Carl Pfirman and Tyler Hubby; music by Joel Goodman;
produced by Ms. Arnold, Ms. Lee and Jeffrey Soros; released
by
HBO
Documentary Films.
Jennifer Arnold
WRITER
/ DIRECTOR / PRODUCER
Jennifer graduated from UCLA and University of Nairobi with a B.A. in
African History and returned to UCLA for a MFA in Film. Her
award-winning film, MAID OF HONOR screened at Sundance before airing
on HBO/Cinemax and Film 4. Jennifer returned to Sundance with her
internet series, "The Mullet Chronicles," which was
developed into the documentary, AMERICAN MULLET and released by Palm
Pictures and Lionsgate. Jennifer also co-directed a documentary for
Ethan Coen and wrote a motorcross script, SPEEDWAY, which was selected
for Berlin Talent Campus' script clinic, IFP's No Borders and FIND's
Directors Lab / Fast Track Program.
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