Directed by
Laura Dunn

Produced by
Laura Dunn & Jef Sewell
Douglas Sewell & William Warren

Executive Producers
Terrence Malick
Robert Redford

Cinematography
Lee Daniel

Editor
Laura Dunn
Emily Morris

Visual Design
Jef Sewell

Opening Titles
Kyle Cooper & Prologue

THE UNFORESEEN

(2007)



The politics behind the environmental movement...

is the subject of this critically-acclaimed, award-winning documentary from director Laura Dunn and executive producers Terrence Malick and Robert Redford. In the 1980s, at the height of the Reagan era, developer Gary Bradley came to Austin, Texas to capitalize on the city's expansive population growth. His ambitious plan called for the transformation of four thousand acres of pristine hill country into one of the state's largest and fastest-selling subdivisions.

When residents discovered the development threatened Barton Springs, a much-beloved naturally spring-fed swimming hole and fragile limestone aquifer, the community decided to fight back, sparking one of the nation's earliest and most important environmental movements. It was an extraordinary win but one that would be short-lived. This engrossing, beautifully crafted documentary intimately chronicles the ensuing political battle (a masterfully orchestrated campaign by Dick Brown, one of the state's most powerful lobbyists) that would lead to the defeat of Ann Richards and the election of newcomer George W. Bush.

Featuring interviews with Gary Bradley, Dick Brown, Robert Redford, Willie Nelson, Ann Richards and economist William Greider, among many others, THE UNFORESEEN links one community's struggle to protect its natural resources to a larger examination of economic development, urban sprawl, environmental sustainability and the American dream.


“The best film of 2007 Sundance Film Festival, hands down.”

— Gavin Smith, Film Comment

Critic’s Reviews

“…one of the most extraordinary accomplishments in recent American nonfiction filmmaking… It hits hard as to facts, and opens its eyes to inexpressible mysteries. It strikes a clear moral and philosophical stance, and then -- as part of that philosophical stance, actually -- reveals its villain as a tragic and sympathetic figure. It's a tale of breathtaking, anti-democratic evil worthy of "Chinatown", but THE UNFORESEEN is something richer and less easy to categorize than a fatalistic fable of capitalist greed and political corruption…[it’s] a gorgeous metaphysical meditation on our endlessly complicated world. ”

Andrew O’Herir, Salon

“…it's ultimately the movie's glacial pace and willingness to let its mind and eye wander that produces its spiritual and intellectual heft — not to mention its atypical visual splendor. …cinematographer Lee Daniel's texture-besotted HD/Super 16 imagery evokes the rapturous transcendentalist quality that surfaces in [Terrence] Malick's own films...

Through its transfixing glimpses of the natural world and an agrarian lifestyle at risk, THE UNFORESEEN ponders nothing less than what happens when we turn our backs on the divine.”

Jim Ridley, The Village Voice

“Laura Dunn's astonishing debut doc feature THE UNFORESEEN is the kind of transformative viewing experience that has made the current period a golden age for nonfiction film. Fests will scramble for this prestige title, and big screen values demand a theatrical run… As a cinematic contemplation of human activity on the planet, it far surpasses An Inconvenient Truth.

Magnificently lensed in HD and 16mm by Lee Daniel, the pic attains Malick’s kind of lyrical beauty and links the images with a resourceful and mind-altering use of maps and motion graphics.

Robert Koehler, Variety

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