
2016
Four years later, Hong Kong’s 2014 democratic Umbrella Movement has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, yet political backlash against protesters has intensified. Repeatedly the target of censorship*, Raise the Umbrellas traces the lineage of the massive Hong Kong protest to the global Occupy movement, 1989 Tiananmen, and its democratic struggles since British colonial days. Highlights range from the Umbrella Movement’s eco-awareness and its burgeoning aspiration for independence, to its empowerment of women -- “umbrella mothers” -- and the rainbow-bridging activism of LGBTQ iconic artists. Incisive and intimate, driven by stirring on-site footage in a major Asian metropolis riven by protest, Umbrellas includes anti-Occupy views that lay bare the sheer political risk for post-colonial Hong Kong’s universal-suffragist striving to define its autonomy within China.

Joshua Wong
Self

Benny Tai Yiu-ting
Self

Martin Lee Chu-ming
Self

Leung 'Long Hair' Kwok-hung
Self

Emily Lau Wai-hing
Self

Anthony Wong Yiu-Ming
Self

Denise Ho Wan-Si
Self

Heiße Ware aus Hong Kong

America: Freedom to Fascism

Heather Booth: Changing the World

Days After n Coming

Manifesto

The New Greatness Case

The Yes Men Fix the World

Serbia, Year Zero

Iron Fists and Kung Fu Kicks

The Yes Men

Inês

Rudy Maxa's World: Hong Kong & Bangkok

Globe Trekker: Hong Kong and Taiwan

McLibel

Resistance

Prayers to the Gods of Guerrilla Filmmaking

Joshua: Teenager vs. Superpower

The Corporation

Ode to Book People

Hong Kong: Retrocession Generation