A father's rights


A very interesting looking film.

Film webpage: http://g2rdistribution.com/

Trailer: http://g2rdistribution.com/afr.trailer.html

YouTube version:

Check out this guys channel as well, this guys is a campaigning divorced father with lots of videos relating to father's rights.

The trailer impressed me, you can go to the website and purchase the film for 15 bucks. I’m not sure how else this has been distributed. Be it on T.V. or in theatres but you can watch it online as well. I’m not really a fan of that, I prefer to actually own the product and there are issues with R1 vs. R2 DVD players (we use R2 in the U.K.). Also, I just forked out £260 (over 500 dollars) on a new exhaust and am not buying anything for the next month – guaranteed!

If I ever get this in the future you can be sure that I will review it but it does look promising. If any of you guys have watched the film then sent me your mini-reviews in the comments section.

Posted on: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 11:51 PM
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Comments

  1. Posted by: Children Need Parents Equally on 4/4/2010 3:25 PM
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    Excellent film. Hollywood quality. Entertaining. Shows exactly what happens in the corrupt courts of the U.S. - the child for money business. Mother can be a terror, father must absorb endless abuse without complaining and the system is extremely prejudiced. The U.S. judges and lawyers generate over $10 Billion dollars a year for state budgets (CLASP)and over $10 Billion a year for laywer friends by ordering sole custody to restrict access to fathers.

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The umbrella in particular is remembered as the symbol of the nineteenth century’s disturbing obsession with individualism. In Bellamy’s utopia, umbrellas have been replaced with retractable canopies so that everyone is protected from the rain equally.
“In the nineteenth century,” explains a character, “when it rained, the people of Boston put up three hundred thousand umbrellas over as many heads, and in the twentieth century they put up one umbrella over all the heads.”