One Peace at a Time

April. 14,2009      
Rating:
7.1
Subscription
Rent / Buy
Subscription
Trailer Synopsis Cast

One Peace at a Time is a film by Turk and Christy Pipkin. It was produced by The Nobelity Project and was premiered to a sold out audience at the Paramount Theatre in Austin, Texas, USA, on April 14, 2009. It is the sequel to the film Nobelity. It has been shown all across the United States and in multiple countries across the world

Similar titles

Medicine Man
Medicine Man
An eccentric scientist working for a large drug company is working on a research project in the Amazon jungle. He sends for a research assistant and a gas chromatograph because he's close to a cure for cancer. When the assistant turns out to be a "mere woman," he rejects her help. Meanwhile the bulldozers get closer to the area in which they are conducting research, and they eventually learn to work together, and begin falling in love.
Medicine Man 1992
This Island Earth
This Island Earth
Aliens have landed and are hiding on Earth, but need Earth’s scientists to help them fight an inter-planetary war.
This Island Earth 1955
A Beautiful Mind
Prime Video
A Beautiful Mind
In a decades-spanning biopic, brilliant mathematician John Forbes Nash Jr. makes history in his field as schizophrenia sets in.
A Beautiful Mind 2001
Coach Zoran and His African Tigers
Coach Zoran and His African Tigers
Documentary following Serbian football coach Zoran Đorđević as he helps form South Sudan's first national football team.
Coach Zoran and His African Tigers 2014
The Lost World
Prime Video
The Lost World
The first film adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's classic novel about a land where prehistoric creatures still roam.
The Lost World 1925
Angel on the Amazon
Angel on the Amazon
An expedition exploring the Amazon jungle comes across a jungle goddess who lives among the animals and fears none of them--and apparently has found the secret of eternal youth.
Angel on the Amazon 1948
Dr. Cyclops
Dr. Cyclops
Four explorers are summoned to Peru by the brilliant physicist Dr Thorkel. They discover a rich source of radium and a half-mad Thorkel who shrinks them down to one-fifth their normal size when they threaten to stop his unorthodox experimentation.
Dr. Cyclops 1940
Frankenstein Island
Prime Video
Frankenstein Island
A hot air balloon crew and a dog find themselves on an island with scantily-clad part-alien women, zombies, and other monsters.
Frankenstein Island 1981
The Relic
Prime Video
The Relic
A homicide detective teams up with an evolutionary biologist to hunt a giant creature that is killing people in a Chicago museum.
The Relic 1997
The Emerald Forest
The Emerald Forest
For ten years, engineer Bill Markham has searched tirelessly for his son Tommy who disappeared from the edge of the Brazilian rainforest. Miraculously, he finds the boy living among the reclusive Amazon tribe who adopted him. And that's when Bill's adventure truly begins. For his son is now a grown tribesman who moves skillfully through this beautiful-but-dangerous terrain, fearful only of those who would exploit it. And as Bill attempts to "rescue" him from the savagery of the untamed jungle, Tommy challenges Bill's idea of true civilization and his notions about who needs rescuing.
The Emerald Forest 1985

Reviews

GrimPrecise
2009/04/14

I'll tell you why so serious

... more
FuzzyTagz
2009/04/15

If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.

... more
AnhartLinkin
2009/04/16

This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.

... more
Numerootno
2009/04/17

A story that's too fascinating to pass by...

... more
Kara Simpson
2009/04/18

These types of movies can seem overwhelmingly depressing and/or preachy, but One Peace at a Time is neither. It presents the realities of challenges within our world, features organizations that are helping, and gives a comprehensive listing of featured organizations at the end of the movie. (A handy reference guide for how you can get involved with any of the causes that touch your heart.) It is also presented in a secular fashion, which is appealing to those whose morals don't need to be tied to religion.The world's problems seem so insurmountable that it's tempting to look the other way, but presented here are a few ideas on how we can all do our part to make the world (our children's world) a better place.

... more
Roland E. Zwick
2009/04/19

The problems of the world can seem so vast and insurmountable at times that our natural inclination may be to simply throw up our hands in despair and determine that nothing can be done to rectify the situation. This is exactly how professional photographer and filmmaker Tuck Pipkin ("Nobelity") used to feel, until he realized that if he simply broke down the problems into smaller, more manageable units, he – or anyone else, for that matter - could actually make a difference. The documentary that he narrates, "One Peace at a Time" - which describes itself as a "movie about a messed-up world and how we can fix it" - attempts to show how millions of individuals, working separately or together on a smaller scale, can, when taken in the aggregate, have a profound effect on the world at large. Pipkin travels the globe in search of individuals and organizations that have found successful ways of coping with problems. He takes us to an orphanage in India, a family-planning program in Thailand, a water project in Ethiopia, an AIDS-treatment program in Sub-Saharan Africa, a model school in India, an innovative loan program in Bagladesh, a medical center in Napal, a community center in Nairobi. And that's just scratching the surface. Pipkin and the filmmakers posit that every person in the world has the right to clean water, adequate nutrition, health care, education, and a safe and nurturing environment. It is this simple and basic philosophy that informs both the movie and the actions each of these individuals is taking to make life better for those less fortunate. Pipkin interviews many of the movers, shakers and thinkers on the issue, some well known, some known only to the members of their own communities. Heck, at one point, even Willie Nelson moseys on by for a sit-down with Pipkin to discuss how we can all learn to live in greater harmony with the environment and each other, all based on the choices we make.Beyond making us all feel better about the world and its prospects for the future, the movie's main goal is to inspire its audience to take an active role in making that world a better place. "One Peace at a Time" is no great shakes as a movie per se, and it does have the air of a glorified public service announcement at times, but if it motivates us to get up off the couch and actually DO something for others, it will have fulfilled its purpose.

... more