In honor of Earth Day, the NHTI Film Society and the NHTI Environmental Action Club proudly present the documentary feature film Trashed: No Place for Waste, starring Jeremy Irons. There will be two showings: April 16 at 10 a.m. in the Multi-purpose Room (Student Center 102), and April 19 at 7 p.m. in Sweeney Auditorium (S122).
Admission is free with an NHTI ID; others by donation ($5 is suggested). For more information, contact Steve Ambra at 271-6484, ext. 4101, or sambra@ccsnh.edu.
Trashed is a multi-award-winning documentary feature film on global waste pollution featuring Irons, who takes us on a journey to explore the risks to the food chain and the environment through the pollution of our air, land and sea by household trash. It ends with a hopeful note on how we can be part of the solution. More information at trashedfilm.com.
Also, don’t miss the NHTI film society’s presentation of Late Bloomers, April 5 at 7 p.m. in the Sweeney Hall Auditorium, S-122, on the campus of NHTI.
Admission is by donation. For more information please visit the NHTI website at nhti.edu or call 230- 4000, ext. 4101.
Late Bloomers was Switzerland’s official entry for Best Foreign Language Film for the 2008 Academy Awards and is a warm, wry, delightful comedy set in Trub, a village in the Emmental Valley in Switzerland’s Berne canton. After mourning the death of her husband, 80-year-old Martha, with the help of her friends, decides to turn the local corner shop into a chic lingerie boutique. But Martha lives in a small village and her son is the vicar. The most successful film in Swiss history – and an NHTI favorite – serves as a refreshing reminder that life definitely does not end at retirement age. In German with English subtitles.