No announcements found.No announcements found.No announcements found.No announcements found.U23D and Human Rights
Stephen Shearsby
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I’m in an enormous South American stadium pressed against the front
stage barrier as U2 punch through their opening adrenalin-fuelled
number, Vertigo. The fans around me throb to the beat, raising their
arms and shouting in unison. I begin to raise my arms too until I
remember that the frenzied mass of humanity in front of me isn’t real.
The guy next to me isn’t moving; he’s lounging comfortably in a padded
chair as he stares through ridiculous glasses. I snap back to reality, I’m in a cinema, watching U2 in 3D! Then I’m glad to see another cinema- going fan getting right into it. The girl in the row ahead stands up to take a photo of the screen using her mobile. I lower the 3D shades only to be embarrassed again. She’s not real either! |
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| U23D is a recorded performance of the band sourced from various
concerts recently played across Latin America. The film offers an
intense concert experience via a sensory-overloading eight storey high
IMAX screen in 3D. The combination of sound, screen and 3D technology
transports the viewer to a place about as close as most of us will ever
get to knowing what it is like stand on stage at a huge Buenos Aires
stadium accepting the adoration of 100,000 screaming Argentines. Although it’s hard to capture everything a U2 show has to offer, with each performance being unique - the band interchanging songs and lead singer, Bono, offering a variety of embellishments on any given night, the film remains a very satisfying experience for anyone with even a passing interest in the band. One constant of U2’s Vertigo Tour was the middle section of each concert where fans were taken on a dark journey to explore themes such as terrorism, war, torture, and famine. Bono implores co-existence of Christian, Jew and Muslim, and the promotion of human rights. As U2 complete the soothing tones of Sometimes You Can’t Make It on Your Own, the gigantic video screen that dwarfs the band turns from a brilliant blue to a muddy crimson. Then there’s that sound. Its a terrifying ‘rattle and hum’ of both human and other worldly proportions. Bono’s indicating our descent into the abyss, he’s saying: ‘Now look what we’ve done!’ |
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| For Bono and the Make Poverty History Campaign it is the Declaration of
Human Rights that provides humanity with its fundamental premise to
remedy the imbalance between rich and poor. Failure to remedy extreme
poverty, it is argued, would be unjust, a demonstration that an African
person is not as valuable as an Australian, British or American person. One might expect the Declaration of Human Rights to be one of those things Christians would strongly support, and at one level this is true. Certainly Christians join with the authors of the Declaration in affirming the dignity and equality of all people along with the hope for freedom, justice and peace in the world. |
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