The Accolade Grants Annual Humanitarian Award 2008
Award goes to Adrian Belic for his documentary, Beyond The Call
In recognition of his contribution to fostering understanding the needs
of the victims
of war, the Accolade’s annual humanitarian award goes
to Adrian Belic and his documentary,
Beyond the Call. The documentary
is a powerful account of three middle-age men who
travel around the
world bringing relief supplies to dangerous war zones.
Congratulations
Adrian!
Beyond The Call - By Yayoi Lena Winfrey
A rousing documentary that leaves the viewer breathless in anticipation of the next
scene,
Beyond The Call could be categorized as an “action adventure” feature. Except
that it’s real life. Following several seemingly ordinary men as they bounce from
one impoverished war-torn country to another (bringing food and medical supplies
that they’ve purchased themselves to surprised victims),
Beyond The Call
has a clear
message: doing for others incapable of doing for themselves is highly rewarding.
Why else would anyone risk his life to help a stranger?
In between traveling to four continents in three months, filmmaker Adrian Belic
took time to answer the following questions about his stirring film.
Q: How did you discover the interesting humanitarians that are the "stars" of your
documentary?
A: I met one of the “stars”, Ed Artis, at a screening of my previous film
Genghis
Blues at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. He came up to my brother
and me (we made
Genghis Blues together) after the screening and Q & A. The short
answer is, he told me a story I did not believe about the humanitarian work he and
his friends do in war zones around the world. I was very intrigued and a few months
later, after sitting down in an interview scheduled for two hours that went six
hours, I knew there was something there. Then, I went with them on a trip and knew
that it would be my next film.
Q: How long did it take you to complete this project?
A: I met Ed Artis in 1999 and began filming in 2000. We finished it at the end of
2005 and had the world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York in May
2006. And now, I’ve been on the road with the film across the U.S. and around the
world for more then a year.
Q:
Do you know how the men acquire and manage the monetary donations?
A: The Knightsbridge guys have a non-profit 501(c)3 organization with a separate
bank account.
Q: Have they experienced flak from any government agency about their unauthorized
missions?
A: They’re small enough to fly under most governmental radar. I also think that
most bureaucrats in most governments (if they check their humanity and common-sense)
will realize that the Knightsbridge guys are really doing a lot of good and will
get out of their way.
Q: The scene in the Karen refugee camp is so poignant. How did those men lose their
limbs?
A: How do most people think the amazing Karen refugee soccer players lost their
legs? Landmines. And the U.S. readers of your article should know that the U.S.
is one of literally a handful of nations in the world that will not sign the landmine
ban that has been signed by nearly every country in the world.
Q: How did you handle being around so much suffering while making this film?
A: I make films so that I can live life to the fullest and, one cannot do that with
one’s humanity and emotions in check. There were a number of times where I would
be quietly crying behind the camera as I filmed what I was witnessing. On numerous
other occasions, I would sling my camera over my shoulder and help with whatever
was happening that needed my help. In my films, I try not to just tell the audience
what is happening or even show them that. Instead, I try to make them
feel
what I did and what those who I was with
felt. It was very difficult coming back to the
States between the filming and hearing that the United States should bomb places
in the world back to the Stone Age and, that if everybody there were killed it would
not be a loss. I cannot describe how infuriating it was to me that people in my
country could be so ignorant and inhuman. I then began feeling sad for the majority
of Americans who felt like that. As you see in the film, I was with people who were
as in imminent danger from bombs, bullets and landmines as they were from hunger,
disease or the bitter cold. Yet, they had the dignity to offer me their last cup
of tea or piece of bread, and to welcome me and the Knightsbridge guys and say thank
you for coming to help--with no desire to change their religion, mess with their
politics or make a buck off of them. If one has the high honor to experience such
human dignity and kindness, it will change one’s life. I wish for more people in
the U.S., those that don't seem to care if our government kills hundreds of innocent
helpless people, to be fortunate enough to experience a gift like that.
Q: What were some of your scariest moments traveling in those foreign and sometimes
hostile environments?
Did you ever wonder if you’d get out of a situation alive?
A: There were the times while traveling through Afghanistan by car and being stopped
by bandits at illegal road blocks with machine guns pointed at us and screaming
at us in languages we did not understand. There were the government officials in
faraway lands that threatened us with imprisonment with little chance of appeal.
There were the single lane mountain roads with thousand-foot drops to one side and
a landmine field to the other side with a bus heading straight for our car. And
then, there was the time in October 2001 that we had to get out of Afghanistan and
back into Tajikistan hidden in a 20-foot container. I thought of the things we were
told when we were little kids and went off wandering in the wilderness: "Remember
to tell your parents or the authorities where you are going"; and, I realized that
no one know where I was. The 20-foot container was probably the scariest.
Q: One of the characters, Ed Artis, has a heart attack in the film. How is his health now?
A: Ed has had six heart attacks since the first one in the film, but he keeps on
doing what he does best--helping those in great need.
Q: What are some of your past projects?
A: My brother, Roko, and I made the documentary feature
Genghis Blues.
It was our
first film after graduating from college. We were very fortunate to win the Sundance
Audience Award and were honored with an Academy Award nomination.
Q: What are you working on next?
A: I have a number of projects in the works in Cuba, Venezuela, Laos, Burma (Myanmar),
and Indonesia.
www.beyondthecallthemovie.com
www.genghisblues.com