Robert Stone

参加作品

Atomic Hope: Inside the Pro-Nuclear Movement
Executive Producer
Is nuclear energy the solution to the climate crisis? Whether it is the only carbon-neutral technology capable of tackling the crisis or a fatally convenient stopgap, time is running out.
Khrushchev Does America
Producer
The story of the unconditional, no-holds-barred tour of America by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, leader of World Communism and America's arch nemesis, during 13 sun-filled days in the fall of 1959.
UFO 侵略
Bouncer
出会ってすぐに惹かれ合ったキャリーと、友人カップルの家に泊まったマイケル。朝になって目を覚ました彼は、家が停電に陥っていることに気付く。状況を確認しようとラジオをつけるがノイズばかりが目立ち、携帯電話も不通状態に。不安に駆られて外に飛び出した彼らが目にしたのは、空に浮かぶ超巨大UFOだった。ぼうぜんとする中、マイケルは以前から宇宙人侵略が始まると宣言していた元軍人の叔父ジョージのもとを訪ねる
Bhutan: Taking the Middle Path to Happiness
Cinematography
Imagine a country where happiness is the guiding principle of government. Imagine a people who see all life as sacred and the source of their happiness, a place with an abundance of clean and renewable energy, a nation committed to preserving its culture and whose progress is measured by obtaining Gross National Happiness for its people. Where is this Shangri-La? Bhutan. But can a place like Bhutan really exist? Can such ideals be realized? Can this small, geographically isolated country tucked away in the Himalayans truly protect its environment and culture as they open their doors to the West? The answer is rooted in the Bhutanese view of the world, anchored in Buddhism, with the simple message that happiness can only be found by taking the middle path the path that balances the needs of man with the powerful spirits of nature.
Bhutan: Taking the Middle Path to Happiness
Producer
Imagine a country where happiness is the guiding principle of government. Imagine a people who see all life as sacred and the source of their happiness, a place with an abundance of clean and renewable energy, a nation committed to preserving its culture and whose progress is measured by obtaining Gross National Happiness for its people. Where is this Shangri-La? Bhutan. But can a place like Bhutan really exist? Can such ideals be realized? Can this small, geographically isolated country tucked away in the Himalayans truly protect its environment and culture as they open their doors to the West? The answer is rooted in the Bhutanese view of the world, anchored in Buddhism, with the simple message that happiness can only be found by taking the middle path the path that balances the needs of man with the powerful spirits of nature.