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1-11 of 11
- A portrait of the late gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson.
- "When I Die" is about the making of the Gonzo Monument to Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, and the blasting of his ashes into the heavens. The infamous outlaw journalist described his funeral plans in a clip from a 1978 BBC documentary which opens "When I Die.". Hunter wanted a 150 foot obelisk built in his backyard from which his ashes would be shot five hundred feet into the air and explode over his beloved Owl Farm in Woody Creek, Colorado. That is exactly what happened in August, 2005, six months after Dr. Thompson committed suicide. In "When I Die" the trials, tribulations and triumphs of this elaborate funeral production are inter cut with 35mm time-lapse photography and the final pyrotechnics are in breath-taking high speed 35mm.
- Hunter Thompson visits the set of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
- Free Lisl - Fear & Loathing in Denver explores the most significant achievement of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson's last years - the freeing of Lisl Auman who was sentenced to life without parole at the age of 21 for the murder of a Denver police officer by someone she had just met while she was handcuffed in the back of a police car. After receiving a letter from Lisl while she was in prison in 2001, Thompson enlisted the support of the nation's top criminal defense lawyers, held a rally on the steps of the Colorado State Capitol and co-wrote an article for Vanity Fair subtitled "Lynching in Denver" - all in an attempt to free Lisl from a life sentence in prison. In March 2005, two weeks after Thompson committed suicide, the Colorado Supreme Court effectively set her free by reversing her conviction and ordering a retrial. A plea bargain leaves her on probation for many years to come, but Lisl is out of prison and appears for the first time in Free Lisl, not to argue her case, but to thank Hunter Thompson.
- The Last Campaign is a documentary feature film about the 2004 campaign for re-election of Justice Warren McGraw for the West Virginia Supreme Court, dubbed the "nastiest" judicial race in 2004, if not the most expensive. The US Chamber of Commerce is suspected of funneling millions of dollars to support ad campaigns against McGraw in the primary and the general election in a successful effort to defeat Justice McGraw as a part of what Forbes magazine described as a "secret war" against judges. The Chamber's shadowy efforts were joined in the general election by a group calling itself "For the Sake of the Kids" which spent millions supplied by a coal company executive in West Virginia to wage a smear campaign against McGraw alleging that he let a sexual predator loose to work in a school. That coal company executive has a pending $60 Million judgment against his company on appeal before the West Virginia Supreme Court, an appeal that will now be heard by the man he spent millions to insure was elected rather than McGraw. The Last Campaign is a sequel to the first film ever made by Wayne Ewing which was called IF ELECTED. That 1972 film covered Warren McGraw's campaign thirty-two years ago for a seat in the West Virginia State Senate. If Elected was broadcast by Bill Moyers in 1973 as a part of his series "Bill Moyers Journal" to critical acclaim: The Washington Star wrote that it was "a documentary for the ages" and The New York Times observed that the film was "thoroughly absorbing." Wayne Ewing went on to make more than forty documentaries for television, along with creating the visual style of the dramatic TV series "Homicide: Life on the Street." His most recent film is the feature documentary BREAKFAST WITH HUNTER about the outlaw Gonzo journalist Dr. Hunter S. Thompson. THE LAST CAMPAIGN incorporates scenes from its prequel IF ELECTED, making it a unique cinema verite chronicle of one man's career in politics, documenting both its beginning and end over a thirty-two year period. The film is also a reflection of how American politics has evolved over three decades.
- This new feature length documentary goes deeper into Gonzo journalism with intimate scenes of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson at work writing, editing, and recounting the creation of classics like Hells Angels and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
- "Playing with Magic" is about the transformational effect for people when playing with horses. In the film, cancer survivors, autism victims, P.T.S.D. sufferers and ordinary people find healing and hope in the company of horses. Based on the book Zen Mind, Zen Horse by brain surgeon Dr. Allan Hamilton, the film follows the experience of a 27 year old Brazilian girl with terminal brain cancer and a 57 year old woman facing liver cancer, as they play with horses at Dr. Hamilton's ranch. Along the way, we learn about 'natural horsemanship' which evolved in the twentieth century to replace the traditional violent methods of 'breaking' horses. The film also follows famed horse whisperer Monty Roberts, who discovered the language of Equus, as he shows veterans how to control and live with their P.T.S.D. by playing with horses. Monty tells his own heart-breaking P.T.S.D. story of being beaten mercilessly by his father, and how horses and a nun named Sister Patricia saved him from killing his father. The film then makes the connection between a world of wounded humans who can benefit from horses and the 200,000 unwanted horses that are languishing in holding pens or on their way to slaughter. The film ends with inspiring stories of horse adoption at the Extreme Mustang Makeover where trainers compete to train a wild mustang in 100 days. Thus, the film starts with people being saved by horses and ends full circle with horses being saved by people.
- Hunter S. Thompson's fight to free Lisl Auman who was sentenced to life without parole for the murder of a Denver police officer.
- Benched: The Corporate Takeover of the Judiciary tells the story of how big business poured money into a judicial campaign in the name of "tort reform." The US Chamber of Commerce is suspected of funneling millions of dollars into the Illinois Supreme Court race on behalf of the Republican candidate who won. Tobacco giant Phillip Morris, which contributes to the US Chamber of Commerce, currently has a 10.1 Billion Dollar judgment for fraud on appeal before the Illinois Supreme Court which may now be reversed with an additional Republican on the bench.
- 198758mTV EpisodeEngaging in a Socratic dialogue with students at St. John's College in Annapolis, philosopher and educator Mortimer Adler offers insights in "America's testament."
- Ordinary citizens reveal the rewards--and personal perils--of defending their rights to privacy, freedom of conscience, and church-state separation before the Supreme Court.