Back to the Garden, Flower Power Comes Full Circle (2009) Poster

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10/10
Well Done Look Into the Future
Jimmy917 December 2009
I thoroughly enjoyed this movie and thought the director did a wonderful job capturing the essence of the personalities. I wonder, did he intend to find them again 20 years later, or did the idea occur to him one day to go find the people he stumbled upon 20 years before?

These stories and interviews resonate withme strongly in part due to my growing up a child of a back-to-the-lander. I found the children's stories fascinating and could relate to all of them in some way. In particular, some of the frustrations of the athletic daughter (forget her name). As I myself grew and ventured off the "hill" to the land of electricity and day jobs, I wondered why some people choose to do without amenities that aren't bad for the earth or those in it. As I reach my mid 30's I look back with an appreciation for my youth but still with the knowledge I wouldn't "put my kids through that." My parents lived in a tent when my brother was born. A tiny tent. In Oregon in the winter. Forethought and planning anyone? And another thing- your kid is unhappy that he is teased at school because of his ill fitting dirty clothes and the adult's sage words of wisdom are "that's their problem, not yours."? It's a struggle when when the values of your parent(s) are at such odds with what is considered (and, let's be honest, if it's considered so it's as good as is to a poor kid who doesn't like being teased) normal.

The roots of my father's (Mom bailed when I was seven. She needed electricity) escape from society are simple enough: his CEO dad and Vietnam breathing down his neck, combined with a low tolerance for stress. But to paraphrase the daughter in the movie, you aren't the center of the universe anymore when you decide to have kids. Fortunately, as is evidenced in the film and as I myself experienced, there is an abundance of love.

I suppose now I fall somewhere in the middle mindset of the kids shown in the movie. The military son seems as foreign to me as anything, yet I myself will allow my kids new shoes, and make a point to be able to afford them. Because 20+ years later I still remember the embarrassment and pain. Yeah- maybe it's shallow, but when I look at pictures of my Dad's childhood he was decked out with a car, new surfboards and nice clothes. He has no idea. To each his own and perhaps with a different temperament I could have held up better under the watchful eye of the school gatekeepers. But in rural Oregon, different is bad.

I loved how the movie shows that life continues. The ferry gathering being a modern version perhaps of the initial 80's love in. Along with the marriage after 22 years. But we change. The communal kitchen next to Dad's place was gone by '85, along with every single other like minded soul. The Moses Lake man knows what I'm talking about. It's my Dad's sanctuary on the hill. Follow the dirt road a couple of miles to the pavement and you are surrounded by rural habit's like unemployment, meth and right wing conspiracies, not to mention right wing voters. How did that happen? Not everyone can eat and drink idealism. Eventually some folks WANT to sleep warm and will do what it takes to make it happen. You move to the jobs.

My biggest complaint of the movie is I was left wanting more. I wanted to hear the military son's perspective. I wanted to hear what the athletic daughter is doing with her life, and her sister. I wanted more characters from before and after. And are there any that look back and smile instead of and maybe aren't so sincere anymore? Were they left on the cutting room floor?

I hope to someday end up with the place on the hill and the 40 acres and the overwhelming garden with the tall fence to keep the deer out. I want to gaze into the forest and be scared of the silence. I LOVE it. But for me it may never be more than a weekend here and there. A place for nostalgia. For the back to nature experience. If I decided to move back to the land, which I someday may do, as I never feel truly at home in the city, it won't be Moses Lake or the like. It will be a small coastal town with retired artists. It will be nearby a college town with professor neighbors. It will be the mountain town where every few days over coffee I see my author friend on his laptop.

I would love to see a part two of this movie another 20 years from now. Where are they then? Where am I then? Where will you be then? This movie makes us wonder. Nice work!
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10/10
A rare and insightful film
screed-712143 March 2017
Back to the Garden is a rare film. None other addresses the back to the earth movement with such honesty, documenting the lure as well as the drawbacks. As a chronicle of flower children growing up, it grants us an even rarer glimpse into where a core of the generation of love landed. And then this film takes us even further, into how the movement has evolved, and ultimately reveals to us the simple hope and humanity found in working for a kinder, more peaceful world. Beliefs developed as youths matured into a continuing commitment to mindfulness in a way we can not only understand, but hopefully recognize some of ourselves within. Back to the Garden is a powerfully gentle film, proving love can be the greatest of denominators among us.
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6/10
Good but I wanted some different info
bdctunes12 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The film has a feel good quality to it and it is interesting to see this movement in the modern era documented on film. I wanted to know how these people survived in terms of making money and putting food on the table. I wanted to know how often they took a shower or something resembling one. Having lived in Tonasket for a couple years of my life. I'm a little familiar with the local hippies, at least as they were in 1980 or so. These were people who generally worked in the fruit industry, at least back them, and I suspect a lot of them collected welfare checks too. I heard back in about 1980 that it was in the 70's when the hippie settlements started in the area. The story went that California news papers in he 70s had articles saying it was cheap and easy to collect welfare in the area. I don't criticize any of it personally except that earthiness that goes with not showering.

That's what I saw when I lived there. I did have a friend who was the son of one of these hippy families..He'd always had showers though, even had a car, which few of us teenyboppers had at the time. There was varying degrees of quality of life among the hippys in the area. At the time, I never noticed so much a sense of peace and love in that scene, or any intentional attemp at oneness with the earth. It seemed more to me like people wanting a simple life and living on the cheap. It was kind of like ghetto's, except they were out in the sticks. Definite poverty and I'm sure some people at times probably froze to death in the winter. In the film we see an upside to things, and these hippies may have no connections to the ones I witnessed in 1980. Bottom line, good film, but I wanted the unromantic details... We do need to save the planet, and there probably is a thing or 2 to learn from the people in the film released in 2009. There's much more to be learned elsewhere too. Technology used in a positive way can do way more than adopting a primitive lifestyle.

That said, at some point, if we are to save the inhabitability of planet earth,human beings are gonna have to sacrifice some comforts. I believe this true, but nobody wants to hear it.

Since 2009, in Washington state we've had devastating wild fires in our state and I'm certain it's impacted the people in the film.
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10/10
Back to the Garden... a Moving, extraordinary film...
bttgfilm10 November 2009
I was so moved and delighted by this extraordinary film... such a clear and persuasive story of authentic people living lives on the land they love.

Persuasive because our own life choices and integrity come into focus as the film dances among themes of family, community, conformity, spontaneity and beliefs...

I'm sure the film will move others to reflect upon their own paths as it makes its way through the world...Bravo! Superb! Love, Henry

posted by Henry Marshall, Ph.D, Amsterdam @ 09:23 AM on November 01, 2009
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