Film is now available for purchase!

To purchase the film, you can send me an email at lisa.m.gilman@gmail.com. I can accept payment either through paypal to that email or a check via snail mail (still trying to figure out how to accept credit cards without increasing my overhead).

The cost of the film is $25, which includes shipping and handling.

All the proceeds will go back into the project to pay for duplication, packaging, promotion,  traveling for me and folks in the film to screenings, and submission fees to festivals. If there is any profit over and above these expenses, it will go to support Coffee Strong.

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Two Portland, Oregon Screenings in July, 2011

July 21 at the Clinton Theater in Portland, OR at 6:00 PM. The 50 minute screening will be followed by a a Q & A with some of the vets featured in the film and me.

August 4: Iraq Veterans Against the War and Veterans for Peace  conventions. Time and place TBA. I think this screening will only be accessible to those registered for the conventions.

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Film available in one week!

I’ve sent the master to be duplicated, and it should be ready in approximately one week! I’m in the process of setting up my website so that orders can be made used paypal. I will post the details when everything is ready.

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Preview in the News Tribune of Tacoma, WA

‘Grounds for Resistance’: Documentary focuses on Lakewood coffee shop just outside JBLM
Documentary: ‘Grounds for Resistance’ spotlights gathering place that serves as soldier support system
MOLLY GILMORE; CONTRIBUTING WRITER
LAST UPDATED: MAY 13TH, 2011 10:39 AM (PDT)

Coffee Strong serves more than coffee.

Just outside the gates of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the Lakewood coffee shop is a gathering place where soldiers and veterans can find not only free coffee but also access to counseling and information about meeting places and services available to them.

If you’re not a soldier, you’re welcome but you will have to pay for your coffee.

The nonprofit coffee shop, which bills itself as pro-soldier and anti-war, is the subject of a new documentary, “Grounds for Resistance,” which premieres Saturday in Olympia and includes an opportunity to talk to filmmakers and veterans.

“As an organization, our goal is to try to help soldiers any way we can,” said Joseph Carter of Seattle, who helps manage Coffee Strong. “This ranges from navigating the process for applying for disability through the Veterans’ Administration, to helping with legal assistance, to providing a place for soldiers to hang out and talk – or if a soldier has a band, giving them a place to play.”

Carter, a veteran and 2010 graduate of The Evergreen State College, is one of four main subjects of the film, all young veterans who helped to found the shop.

He and other subjects of the documentary will be at Saturday’s premiere along with director Lisa Gilman of Portland.

Gilman, a folklore professor at the University of Oregon, discovered Coffee Strong while doing research on the music soldiers listen to while they’re deployed. “Grounds for Resistance” is her first film.

“I found what they were doing to be so compelling and so important that I started the filmmaking project,” she said.

The film focuses on the first year of Coffee Strong, which was founded in November 2008 and is now one of two such GI coffee shops in the United States.

“The film tells their personal stories,” Gilman said. “It also shows how they create community for each other as they are struggling with their experiences of war, their politics, their feelings of guilt, their trauma. They are a real support system for each other at the same time as they are participating in regional and national activism.”

That activism is focused on helping soldiers rather than on politics.

“You have everybody here, from a peace activist or a pacifist who is against all war all the time, to someone like myself who says, ‘Hey, I think the Iraq War is poor foreign policy for America,’ ” Carter said. “We have this common ground. We support soldiers.” ‘Grounds for Resistance’

What: This documentary about GI coffee shop Coffee Strong, just outside the gates of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, will have its world premiere in Olympia. Veterans and filmmakers will be there for a Q&A after the screening.

When: 6:30 p.m. Saturday

Where: Capitol Theater, 206 Fifth Ave. S.E., Olympia

Tickets: $8.50, $5.50 for Olympia Film Society members, $4 for kids

More information: 360-754-6670 or http://www.olympiafilm society.org

COFFEE STRONG

What: This nonprofit coffee shop is a gathering spot where soldiers can hang out and get access to support services as well as free coffee and Americanos. But the shop is open to everyone, serving Stumptown coffee and a full array of espresso beverages.

When: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Mondays-Fridays, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays

Where: 15109 Union Ave. S.W., Lakewood

More information: 253-581-1565 or www.coffeestrong.org

Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/05/13/v-printerfriendly/1663377/find-common-ground-at-gi-coffee.html#ixzz1P0JAe94c

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Reflecting on May 24 UO screening

Yesterday’s screening on the University of Oregon’s campus was really special for me. After traveling up to Lakewood so many times to work on the documentary, it was great to have some of the Coffee Strong crowd make their way down to my world. I was moved by how many of my friends, colleagues, and students came to the event. I’ve received lots of great comments from people thanking me for educating them about something they didn’t know much about and especially for the opportunity to get to know some of the Coffee Strong folks both through the movie and in person. Those of us involved in the project left the event energized and ready for the next show! Hopefully some folks who do future screenings will be inspired to bring a small group out for a Q&A.

Thanks to everyone who came, and I hope you’ll help spread the word about the next Eugene screening on June 9 at 7 pm at the Bijou.

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People featured in film

Central to the film are four veterans–Seth Manzel, Andrew Wright, Joseph Carter, and Josh Simpson–who were centrally involved in Coffee Strong at the time of filming, from May 2009 – February 2010. Many other veterans, civilian members of the Coffee Strong, and participants in the 2009 joint Veterans for Peace and Iraq Veterans Against the War convention in Maryland also feature prominently.

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Joseph Carter

JOSEPH participated in the invasion of Iraq, serving as a communications equipment operator for the U.S. Army. His second deployment reinforced his beliefs that the Iraq war was poorly planned and immoral.

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Andrew Wright

ANDREW was in the Marine Corps infantry from 2000 to 2004. He became disillusioned with the U.S. military when he took part in the invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq. He discovered GI Voice in college and joined their efforts to open Coffee Strong, thinking ”imagine if a place like this had existed when I was in?”

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Josh Simpson

JOSH was a counter intelligence agent for the US Army. He was deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom from 2004-2005 with the 25th Infantry Division. While in Iraq, he conducted many interrogations. Josh is a founding member of COFFEE STRONG.

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Seth Manzel

SETH joined the Army Infantry in September 2002 as a Stryker Driver and later became a Machine Gunner, Vehicle Commander, and Squad Leader. After his recruiter falsely promised education and childcare benefits, Seth began to question his decision to join. He was deployed to Iraq in 2004 for one year, where his disapproval of the war solidified. Inspired by the GI-run coffee house movements of the Vietnam era, Seth was one of the founders of COFFEE STRONG.


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