Ron Finne

Most Popular Ron Finne Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

People Near Here Trailer (1969)

01 January 1969

"Do something for the camera!" In the late twenties, 16mm home movie cameras became available and the well-off used them through the 1930s.

Keep Off The Grass Trailer (1968)

01 January 1968

Found footage short film by Ron Finne.

Natural Timber Country Trailer (1972)

11 August 1972

Tells the story of the logging industry in Oregon, with emphasis on older logging techniques. The film lacks a traditional narrator, instead giving us interviews with loggers taped in the field or their homes.

The Trials of Life Trailer (1990)

03 October 1990

Each of the twelve 50-minute episodes features a different aspect of the journey through life, from birth to adulthood and continuation of the species through reproduction.

Demonstration Movie Trailer (1968)

18 February 1968

Noted lecturer, Eugene M. Wank, instructs us using a folding chair as a metaphor for life's choices. In this theatre event he shows the audience how to turn their chairs so that instead of facing front, facing the screen, they change to face each other across an aisle in which the innocent, funky ballet will be performed.

For Life, Against the War Trailer (1967)

30 January 1967

First shown on January 30, 1967, FOR LIFE AGAINST THE WAR was an open-call, collective statement from American independent filmmakers disparate in style and sensibility but united by their opposition to the Vietnam War.

Tamanawis Illahee Trailer (1983)

01 January 1983

A film of the Pacific Northwest, the native people, poetry, history and the forces of change. This was an homage to the Indian heritage of the Pacific Northwest and a study in the contrast of how native people used the land, as opposed to European settlers who gradually took it over.

How Old is the Water Trailer (1968)

01 January 1968

A film by Ron Finne

The Whale Trailer (1971)

11 March 1971

A documentary short about the "exploding whale" in Florence, Oregon, in 1973, and the environmental impact of whaling.