US – Thursday, September 9
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Published 20:46, June the 23rd, 2010
 
Jamie Moffett turns the lens on El Salvador in his new film.Jamie Moffett turns the lens on El Salvador in his new film.
Photo: JAMIE MOFFETT MEDIA DESIGN AND PRODUCTION
 

An ‘Ordinary Radical’ in El Salvador

If you go

‘Return to El Salvador’
Philadelphia premiere at the Philadelphia Independent Film Festival
Tonight, 8, Ritz East, 125 S. Second St.
www.philadelphiaindepen
dentfilmfestival.com

 

For local director Jamie Moffett, a chance conversation with a former professor sparked an obsessive, 18-month journey into a tiny country’s fight with a big corporation.  

“Return to El Salvador” delves into a complex, layered tragedy: the mysterious death of human rights activist Marcelo Rivera, El Salvador’s fight for sovereignty, the nearly two million Salvadoran refugees in the U.S., and the questionable practices of Canadian mining company Pacific Rim.

“Eighteen months ago, I probably couldn’t have found El Salvador on a map,” says Moffett from his Kensington studio, just before leaving for a screening at Canadian Parliament.

But this director is no stranger to flying by the seat of his pants — or complexity. The 34-year-old self-described agnostic co-founded The Simple Way — the activist Kensington Christian community — in 1998. He chronicled fellow Simple Way activists in his 2008 film, “Ordinary Radicals.”

Moffett has since left The Way, and his personal activism is somewhat more worldly than simple. Though he doesn’t seem to make decisions based on profit, Jamie Moffett Media Design and Production is definitely a for-profit company.

“My intention has always been to be a sheep in wolf’s clothing,” he says. “We’re trying to sell compelling narratives and market them in a way that we can give money to the organizations we’re inspired by.”

If you’re looking for evidence of Moffett’s ability to work the system, you might recognize the narrator of this little documentary: Martin Sheen.

On the budget

Moffett made the film for $100,000 — not a fortune in the film world, but it came at a price. He recently laid off his one full-time staffer, along with three frequent freelancers.  “I wouldn’t recommend making an independent film in the worst economy in 50 years. I hope that the next time around I have a little more, I don’t know, funds in the bank or something … ” But then he trails off and thinks for a moment. “Ahh, screw it, I’d probably do it the same way. I just had to tell this story.”

 
BRUCE WALSH
 
 
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MMMpod
In the July MMMpod, Young Veins talk about breaking away from Panic! at the Disco, Keith Lockhart talks about Buckwheat Zydeco throwing the Boston Pops for a loop, Zooey Deschanel talks about how Roy Orbison inspired a She & Him song, Derek Miller of Sleigh Bells talks about how awesome Funkadelic is, and we talk about how awesome Jimmy Cliff is, who in turn talks about Sam Cooke and divine intervention. An explosive show for July! Oh yeah, and we also test your knowledge of America songs in the MMMPod medley.







 
 
 
Metro Life Panel