Produced & Directed by
Laura Dunn & Jef Sewell
Executive Producers
Terrence Malick
Robert Redford
Co-Producers
Owsley Brown, III
Gill Holland
Brenda Mitchell
Elaine Musselman
Nick Offerman
Cinematography
Lee Daniel
Editor
Laura Dunn
Visual Design
Jef Sewell
Score
Kerry Muzzey
Sound
Justin Hennard
Engravings
Wesley Bates
LOOK & SEE: A Portrait of Wendell Berry
(2017)
LOOK & SEE revolves around the divergent stories of several residents of Henry County, Kentucky who all face difficult choices that will dramatically reshape their relationship with the land and their community.
In 1965, Wendell Berry returned home to Henry County where he bought a small farm house and began a life of farming, writing, and teaching. This lifelong relationship with the land and community would come to form the core of his prolific writings. A half-century later, Henry County, like many rural communities across America, has become a place of quiet ideological struggle. In the span of a generation, the agrarian virtues of simplicity, land stewardship, sustainable farming, local economies, and rootedness to place have been replaced by a capital-intensive model of industrial agriculture characterized by machine labor, chemical fertilizers, soil erosion, and debt that continue to fray the fabric of rural communities. Writing from a long wooden desk beneath a forty-paned window, Berry has watched this struggle unfold, becoming one of the most passionate and eloquent voices in defense of agrarian life.
Filmed across four seasons in the farming cycle, LOOK & SEE blends observational scenes of farming life and interviews with farmers and community members with evocative, carefully-framed shots of the surrounding landscape. Thus, in the spirit of Berry’s agrarian philosophy, Henry County itself emerges as a character in the film - a place deeply interdependent with the people who inhabit it.
“In [the film], d Laura Dunn uses the life and work of Wendell Berry as a springboard for exploring the collapse of the agrarian way of life, which means not just farms but the small-town economies they keep alive. The movie’s prologue, which explores the fragmentation brought on by so-called interactive technologies, could be viewed as the definitive anti-SXSW statement. But! But we forgive her because the movie uses the tools of cinema to transport you to another realm.
We’d like to recognize LOOK & SEE’s Visual Design which includes archival footage, original etchings between the film’s chapters and cinematography that captures the spirituality of the material world without lapsing into the womb. It is a beautifully grounded piece of work...”
— David Edelstein, NYMag/NPR