Category: Movie Recommendations

  • Now Streaming Online: The Victorian Kitchen Garden

    The Victorian Kitchen Garden was a 13-part British television series produced in 1987 for the BBC.  It follows a master gardener, Harry Dodson, through his year-long attempt to revive the long-fallow walled garden of Chilton Lodge, a country estate in Berkshire, using entirely Victorian-era plants, tools, and methods.  Watch by visiting https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x5mpc6t

    Harry James Dodson (11 September 1919 – 25 July 2005) was an English gardener who became a celebrity as a result of the BBC television documentary series The Victorian Kitchen Garden, which features his professional expertise and his reminiscences. Born in Byfleet, his father was a gardener and his uncle was head gardener to the Earl of Selborne.

    He left school at 14, and over the next six years worked his way up from garden boy to journeyman. In 1937 he started work at Stansted Park as a ‘young improver journeyman’ in the kitchen garden. When the Second World War started he served briefly in France, but was discharged on medical grounds. He was appointed general garden foreman at Leigh Park in Hampshire. The large house had been commandeered by the Admiralty and Dodson’s task was to grow enough food for several hundred people every day. After the war he moved to Nuneham Park, near Oxford, where he met his future wife, Jane.

    In 1947 he was appointed head gardener at the Chilton Estate, near Chilton Foliat, growing flowers and vegetables for the household in an extensive walled garden, with heated greenhouses and 200 yards of cloches. By 1981 the cost of maintaining the garden had become too high for its owner. He made it over to Dodson, who ran it as a commercial nursery.

    He was a successful exhibitor at the Royal Horticultural Society‘s shows, and in 1956 he joined the fruit and vegetable committee and served as a judge at its shows for nearly 50 years.

  • Online: Alex Krieger’s Iconic Illustrated Lecture: Land for City on a Hill

    Join Alex Krieger, professor and former chair of the Department of Urban Planning and Design at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, on his iconic tour of Boston as he speaks to the historic and contemporary geographical, infrastructural, and racial conditions of the city. The video is a fascinating thirty minute review of the history of Boston, and Cambridge as well. We highly recommend this movie. Free. Click HERE.

  • Thursday, March 18, 6:00 pm – The Life and Gardens of Beatrix Farrand

    Thursday, March 18, 6:00 pm – The Life and Gardens of Beatrix Farrand

    The compelling film The Life and Gardens of Beatrix Farrand chronicles the life of one of the founders of the American Society of Landscape Architects, Beatrix Farrand (1872-1959) who was the niece of Edith Wharton. Beatrix grew up in the privileged world of the East Coast elite and fought through the challenges of working in a male-dominated profession to successfully design over 200 landscapes during her remarkable 50-year career.


    The narrative is recounted through interviews with Farrand scholar Diana Balmori, landscape historian Judith Tankard (a GCBB member!), and landscape architect Shavaun Towers. Current photographs and footage of more than 50 Farrand-related sites along with archival images from the Beatrix Farrand Archives at the University of California Berkeley are woven together to bring to life Beatrix Farrand’s extraordinary story, reminding us why her awe-inspiring work is still relevant to this day.

    This March 18 Garden Club of the Back Bay Zoom screening followed by a discussion with the director, Karyl Evans. Respond by March 12 by clicking HERE. A Zoom link will be sent a few days before the program.

    Karyl Evans is a six-time Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker. Ms. Evans, owner of Karyl Evans Productions LLC in North Haven, Connecticut has produced more than 50 historical documentary projects over her 30 year career. Karyl is on the National Speakers List for the Garden Club of America and is a Fellow at Yale University. 

  • Streaming Now: Full Bloom

    Many know that we are prone to fall down the rabbit hole of binge watching reality television, especially when the subject is flowers. HBO Max is now treating us to Full Bloom. Inviting us into a vibrant and wondrous world, Full Bloom finds ten talented and innovative up-and-coming florists bringing their spectacular creative visions to a grueling but gorgeous competition series. In each episode, the budding botanical artists are put to the test in both individual and team challenges that determine whose stems get cut – and who remains in the running for the career-changing $100,000 grand prize to kickstart their business. Floral masterminds Simon Lycett, Elizabeth Cronin, and Maurice Harris host and judge, bringing their invaluable experience, discerning eyes, and hot takes to the flower shop to determine who will be the first-ever Full Bloom champion.

  • Video Tour of the Gardens at Anglesey Abbey

    Though the Abbey has medieval roots, the gardens date mainly from the 20th Century and were designed by owner, Lord Fairhaven and his friend Major Vernon Daniel. Take a five minute online garden tour with the Royal Oak Foundation by visiting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a83FFAMPfZc&feature=youtu.be

    Lord Fairhaven designed his Cambridgeshire garden around personal taste and his regular routine of entertaining guests, with something to show them each and every season. Today, the gardens still follow the same seasonal pattern. In this video, Garden and Outdoors Manager Tom Fradd takes us on an exclusive tour, including the working areas not normally seen by the public, to show you how he and his team keep it looking so good. 

  • Now Through Tuesday, December 15 – Boston Turkish Arts & Culture Festival – Ovacik, Online

    On view now are thirty nine films in the Boston Turkish Festival’s 15th Annual Documentary and Short Film Competition, 22 of which are documentaries. Vote online for your favorite film for the audience award after screening. One film focused on community and sustainability is Ovacik, directed by Ayşegül Selenga Taşkent.

    Fatih Mehmet Maçoğlu is the first mayor ever in Turkey elected from the Turkish Communist Party. At the time of the filming of this documentary, he was the mayor of Ovacık, Tunceli, a small Kurdish-Alevi town in the heart of Eastern Turkey. (Currently he is the mayor of the city of Tunceli) 
    Unknown to the rest of the world, it is an area where cultural and humanistic values, peace, love and community work are cherished, and where production and education are pursued with almost no budget. 


    The film follows the daily life in Ovacık and Mr. Maçoğlu’s efforts to strengthen a sustainable economy by promoting community-based agriculture. Both the mayor’s and the residents’ remarkable efforts set an example for agricultural towns around Turkey. The honest and heartfelt example of Ovacik starts building a very important communication bridge between the East and the West of the country. $10 screening fee. Watch online at https://watch.eventive.org/bostonturkish2020/play/5f8a119c790e360053ea0f72

  • Milkweed and Monarchs

    Preserving plants like milkweed is vital to protecting monarch butterflies and other pollinators. Milkweed is essential to the survival of monarch butterflies as monarch butterflies only lay their eggs on milkweed and caterpillars only eat milkweed plants. Other pollinators, including different bee and butterfly species, also pollinate on milkweed because it provides valuable nectar resources. You can find native milkweed growing along the Esplanade!


    The Esplanade Association has linked Unraveling the Monarch Butterfly Migration Mystery, a short video that shares the fascinating story on the migration of monarch butterflies and features how milkweed is essential to their species.

  • The Big Flower Fight

    Netflix has set out to entertain all the flower arrangers and travelers who despair they will ever be able to visit the Chelsea Flower Show again, The Big Flower Fight is a new show where ten pairs of florists, sculptors, and garden designers face off to see who can build the biggest, boldest garden sculptures. Flower designer Kristen Griffith-VanderYacht judges each week with a different expert judge joining him. Kristen Griffith-VanderYacht runs Wild Bloom, creating bespoke arrangements, and his creations have featured in publications like Martha Stewart Weddings, Traditional Home Magazine, and The Knot. The winners will get to display an original design at Kew Gardens. The contestants are the mixed bag you would expect in a competition show – the young ladies studying floristry at University, a pair of artists who don’t know much about plants but have a vision, a charming estate gardener from I swear medieval England and his son, wedding flower arrangers from the US, landscape architects who are more about the architecture and less about the flowers, etc. If you love The Great British Baking Show, you will enjoy this eight episode season. The trailer may be viewed at https://www.netflix.com/title/81046153

  • Everything’s Coming Up Roses at Castle Hill

    Enjoy a YouTube presentation by Castle Hill Horticulturist Beth Walsh as she talks us through the plans for planting in the garden, starting this year. Bringing back to life the romance and inspiration of a garden whose name is rose will certainly involve some sublime varieties of the namesake. In addition to roses, the new planting will also showcase a wide collection of perennials and annuals that expand the season of beauty and enhance the romantic feel of the garden. The 30 minute video is available now at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdM-FjAp30I&feature=youtu.be

  • The Best Gardening Movies

    Farm Coast Editorial compiled a list of The Best Gardening Movies, not documentaries, on its blog: https://www.farmcoasteditorial.com/blog/gardening-movies The list includes movies that “actually showcase the act of gardening within a movie setting.” Most are available on Netflix, Amazon or Hulu – the Farm Coast Editorial post dates from 2019 so you may have to do a bit of searching. Enjoy!