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Girls Rock!
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Directed by Arne Johnson, Shane King.
Via their documentary Girls Rock!, co-directors Arne Johnson and Shane King transport viewers to a most unusual summer destination: Rock 'n' Roll Camp, where young women from ages 8 to 18 each spend one week learning to choose a band, play a rock instrument, and write a song. The central lesson behind the week's activities involves a complete liberation from social conformity and from traditionally accepted behavioral rules and gender stereotyping. More significantly, such real-life rock legends as Sleater-Kinney and Carrie Brownstein participate in the camp, encouraging the young girls to fully accept their own individuality, eccentricities, and interpersonal differences, while they offer instruction on such areas as anger management and self-defense. The documentary -- like each week of the camp itself -- concludes with a massive rock concert, performed by the bands in front of over 700 people. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
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ShaunHustonShaunHuston Girls Rock!
by ShaunHuston in ShaunHuston filmblog
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"Girls Rock! is an involving, alternately depressing and inspiring, documentary about the Portland, Oregon-based Rock 'n' Roll Camp for Girls. If the film makes anything clear, it's this: as much as opportunity and choice have been expanded by and for girls and women, the world is still basically a boys club, making women-controlled spaces and gatherings like the camp absolutely necessary for girls to assert ownership over their identities and to develop tools and skills for approaching the world with confidence and a sense of self.Indeed, as represented in the film, the camp experience is as much about catharsis, and even therapy, as it is about rock. Besides the playing of music, the forming of week-long bands, and song writing, the curriculum includes a self-defense class, opportunities to talk about body image, and exercises for gaining confidence for self-expression. Looking at that list of activities, it would be easy to see the “rock 'n' roll” ... " [More]
 



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