Garbage Warrior (2007)
Director: Oliver Hodge
Movie review
From Time Out London
This interesting – and timely – documentary profiles unorthodox architect, eco-warrior and founder of Earthship Biotecture, Michael Reynolds. Since the late 1970s, the wild-haired 60-year-old has been setting up communities of increasing size in remote New Mexico locations based on his experimental, self-sufficient houses.His 1972-built ‘Thumb House’ pioneered his use of trash items – old glass and plastic, tin cans, earth-filled tyres – and enclosed sewerage, water and heat collection systems. Since then, his radical and increasingly urgent ideas on sustainable living and his lopsided, idiosyncratic DIY dwellings – like Mesopotamian kilns – have brought him into dispute with US state and national planning and legal institutions.
Oliver Hodge provides an engaging examination of this tireless, free-speaking innovator, firstly on his building and land-acquisition projects with his wife, clients and supporters, through his battles to set up enabling legislation for experimental building and the recovery of his architecture licence and, more recently, constructing houses in the post-tsunami Andaman Islands. ‘I started all this thinking with quality of life in mind,’ says Reynolds, ‘but we’re talking about survival now.’ Hodge doesn’t provide a critical nor comparative architectural thesis.
There are no references here to Reynolds’ inspiration, the visionary architect Buckminster Fuller, for instance, or the wider practitioners of ‘radical neo-global economists’. But his film does offer a fascinating glimpse of alternative living styles and point an accusing finger at the inactivity of our sleeping global masters.
Author: Wally Hammond
Time Out London Issue 1970, May 21 - 27, 2008
Most popular on this site
Features
Head trip
Fall preview: Charlie Kaufman's Synecdoche, New York is one of the most mind-bending films of the season.
Kiss and tell
A director and his star use their personal lives as inspiration. And it isn't self-indulgent. Promise.
Leo rising
Melissa Leo talks about good direction, being <i>too</i> method and how to get ahead in indies.
Top of the World
Documentarian James Marsh turns a wire-walking stunt into high drama.
Harvest feast
Black Harvest reaps the best of black filmmaking, local and international.
Sibling revelry
The Duplass brothers have big plans. Hollywood, beware.
The Goode news
Matthew Goode springs to the defense of the new <i>Brideshead Revisited</i> like a superhero-in-the-making.



What do you think?
Post your review now