Esperanto (2022)

ALL 07/15/2022 (en) Documentary 50 Min
  • Release
    07/15/2022
  • Production
    Teton Gravity Research, Ten Ninety One
  • Rotten tomato
    0%
  • Original title
    Esperanto
  • Original language
    en
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Spoken Worldwide

Overview

Esperanto is TGR’s latest action-packed mountain bike film with an added twist. Mixing the rock stars of the sport with a cast of unknown and up-and-coming heroes, the film explores how we share our dreams through a universal two-wheeled language no matter what our native tongue may be. The sacred ritual of the ride might sound different all across the world – whether it’s a full-face getting pulled down to drop into a big jump line or wheeling a beat-up bike out of a mud hut to pedal to school – but it’s a universal process no matter what language we speak. There are more than 7000 languages spoken on Earth. In 1887 a Polish-Jewish doctor named L.L. Zamenhof created a new one, a universal second language based on a combination of existing widely-spoken European languages. Its goal, to help bring people together from different ideologies, beliefs, and nations and ultimately to help end war. The language was called Esperanto. Translated into English it means ‘one who hopes.’

  1. Jeremy Grant

    Director

  2. Story



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Casts

Full Cast & Crew

Casts : 23 , Crews : 13

Keyword

Esperanto (2022) 50 Min

ALL 07/15/2022 (en)
Documentary
  • Release 07/15/2022
  • Production
    Teton Gravity Research, Ten Ninety One
  • Original title Esperanto
  • en
  • Revenue0.00

Spoken Worldwide

Overview

Esperanto is TGR’s latest action-packed mountain bike film with an added twist. Mixing the rock stars of the sport with a cast of unknown and up-and-coming heroes, the film explores how we share our dreams through a universal two-wheeled language no matter what our native tongue may be. The sacred ritual of the ride might sound different all across the world – whether it’s a full-face getting pulled down to drop into a big jump line or wheeling a beat-up bike out of a mud hut to pedal to school – but it’s a universal process no matter what language we speak. There are more than 7000 languages spoken on Earth. In 1887 a Polish-Jewish doctor named L.L. Zamenhof created a new one, a universal second language based on a combination of existing widely-spoken European languages. Its goal, to help bring people together from different ideologies, beliefs, and nations and ultimately to help end war. The language was called Esperanto. Translated into English it means ‘one who hopes.’

  1. Jeremy Grant

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Lindsay Marie Stewart, Joey Searle, Jeremy Grant

    Editor

  4. Pat Focke, Aaron Whitley

    Producer