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Rocks Karma Arrows <br />3- minute TRAILER: https: / /vimeo.com/88480847 <br />Rocks Karma Arrows is a film of Motus Theater's multimedia contemporary theater piece looking at <br />Boulder history through the lens of race and class. Historical figures, like the great Chief Niwot, come <br />alive to tell the story of the early founding of Boulder and the final massacre at Sand Creek. Interviews <br />with local historians and Buddhist monks are woven with historical photographs and film into the drama. <br />At times the photographic images completely take over 180° of the theatrical space so that actors are <br />literally immersed in the history – interacting with the photos, struggling with the voices of the past, and <br />trying to understand how those voices echo in the present. The highly acclaimed production debuted as an <br />official city event for the Boulder Sesquicentennial in 2009 at the Alliance for Technology, Learning and <br />Society at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The film was created with a generous grant from the <br />National Endowment for the Arts. <br />Rocks Karma Arrows is a key presentation for the One Action 2016: Arts + Immigration Project because <br />It explores the impact immigrants had on the Native American tribes from this area and reveals challenges <br />different immigrant groups faced when they came here as part of the mining or agricultural industry. For <br />more information on Rocks Karma Arrows see: http: / /motustheater.org/rocks- karma - arrows <br />QUOTES ON ROCKS KARMA ARROWS <br />"Rocks Karma Arrows is packed with as much information as a semester of lectures, but it's never a <br />drag. It employs a diverse set of performance styles and techniques, but it's highly accessible... It's a look <br />in the mirror — often an uncomfortable one — but it's not heavy handed, nor does it peddle guilt or sell <br />shame. It covers enough ground to leave you breathless, yet gives you room to breathe and think and, <br />finally, to respond. " - Mark Collins, Theater Reviewer ,Boulder Daily Camera <br />"If I could wave a magic wand, I would love to have the Rocks Karma Arrowsfilm, be required viewing <br />to all freshman. " - Arturo Aldama, Professor of Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado at Boulder <br />Rocks Karma Arrows is a remarkable lesson that you can't undo the past, but if you recognize it, if you <br />learn about it and learn from it, then you can move forward in the future more honorably. - Steven <br />Moore, Attorney, Native Americans Rights Fund <br />"I think there'd be value in every elected official, community representatives, nonprofits to see the film - <br />to appreciate the history of where we come from. It's a great learning tool." - Deb Gardner, Boulder <br />County Commissioner <br />