We reached out to our past World Wildlife Day Film Showcase filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
What inspired this story? Director Lesley Chilcott: Captain Paul Watson himself. He is living his life like a superhero in an action movie, every moment is dedicated to saving the life in the ocean, on or off the high seas. I’m always looking for a new way to talk about biodiversity and extinction, and making an action movie masquerading as a documentary seemed like a fitting way to tell Paul’s story. Were there any surprising or meaningful experiences you want to share? LC: The sheer numbers of fish and creatures of the ocean we kill every day is even more staggering than I previously knew. This is a problem with many solutions and most of the time we do nothing, primarily because it is all done out of sight of the public eye. Yet when you swim or scuba dive with some of these magical creatures, say a humpback whale or a tiger shark, and they look back at you and allow you to get close to them, you realize there is a whole other type of intelligence we really know very little about. What impact do you hope this film will have? LC: I hope that people will appreciate the sheer beauty of the ocean and all that lies within it, and that starts by paying attention to what is on your plate. And if you don’t care about that, then perhaps think about how up to 70% of our oxygen coming from the ocean itself. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film. LC: Captain Paul has done so much over the years, maybe ten major pieces of action per year for nearly fifty years so it was difficult to choose the actions or campaigns that could fit in a 99 minute film while still showing the breadth of his unique experiences and outlook on life. A good problem to have, but challenging nonetheless! What drove you as a filmmaker to focus on biodiversity? LC: Biodiversity is the key to individual health as well as the health of our planet. It’s so extremely interesting and it never ends…so many more stories to tell!
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We reached out to our Jackson Wild Media Awards filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
What inspired this story? Writer and Director Peter Stonier: When National Geographic Explorer Naftali Honing, Research and Development Director at African Parks in the Congo, granted the Esri's visual storytelling team an interview, we could see that he had a great story to tell. The question was how to tell it. The story was one of how a technology, not much known beyond the community of specialists who use it, has tremendous potential to take on some of the world's greatest conservation challenges -- such as wildlife poaching and trafficking. Naftali was putting the tech to great use protecting elephants and rangers from some of the most formidable armed poachers in the world -- and winning. This was all clear from his interview. We captured him on video telling us all about this - but doing the story justice required b-roll. There was none. Filming in the Congo would be costly, getting good wildlife shots time consuming, and shots of poachers dangerous, if not impossible. Thus came the idea - let's animate it! We could still feature Naftali photo-realistically, but get all the shots we needed by drawing them! That's how the journey began. How do you approach storytelling? PS: Two things we immediately realized in taking an animated approach to the story were: a) We could tell a story in the most basic sense of the word - as a "Once upon a time, in a wild kingdom far away" ... narrative drawing from conventions of Hollywood fiction. "Story" is probably one of the most overused words in corporations. Narratives devoid of character, conflict, drama, hope, fear, climax and resolution are often still described as "stories." Lists of software features are even described as stories. Here we clearly had all the ingredients for a story - exotic locations, animals, compelling characters, protagonists, antagonists, as well as relevance to an important issue of global concern. Our writer, with years of experience scripting for Hollywood and the BBC, decided to make this into what any child would recognize as a story. By drawing the images, instead of working with a camera on the ground, we had complete visual control. This helped us borrow from the compelling conventions of dramatic fiction, even though we were producing non-fiction. b) We knew that documentary footage of animal poaching could be seen as overly gruesome and violent for some audiences. Animated illustration allowed us to still communicate the realities of the violence, and be emotionally evocative, while softening the tone. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film/program? PS: Perhaps the biggest challenge faced was not a production challenge but one of getting our marketing team on-side to support the project. We needed to overcome a bias that animation is "for children" and "inappropriate for a technology company." In other words, despite the flourishing of animation across so many genres of storytelling - some still equate animation with cartoons. A major turning point came when the video was first showcased at an Esri user conference where Jane Goodall and Ed Wilson praised it as a "fantastic way to communicate how GIS is vital to supporting conservation." What did you learn from your experience making this film/program? PS: That technology has evolved to the point where mixing photorealistic and animated forms of storytelling can be done relatively quickly and cheaply. What's hard is figuring out how to mix the mediums into relevant, compelling storytelling! What impact do you hope this film/program will have? PS: We hope to raise awareness of the effectiveness of GIS technology in fighting poaching and wildlife trafficking and get it used more widely throughout the world. A joint initiative between National Geographic and ESRI is helping achieve this.
We reached out to our Jackson Wild Media Awards filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
What inspired this story? Director Alizé Carrère: In 2015 I was looking for a US-based story for my Adaptation film series. I think I literally googled ‘adaptation in America’ and came across a short local Kentucky news article about a Chinese-American woman who was helping Americans adapt to the invasive Asian carp crisis by creating a market for the fish. I didn’t even know we had an Asian carp crisis, but I quickly learned about it! I was so captivated by Angie’s story. Here was someone from another country who picked up her entire life and moved to a small town in the middle of rural America to start a business around something that Americans want nothing to do with. I sent her an email and we maintained an email exchange for 2 years. I kept promising her I would one day come and tell her story as a part of a film project I was working on once I raised the money. I finally showed up on her doorstep in 2018 with a film crew. What impact do you hope this film/program will have? AC: I think I speak for everyone who is a part of this film/story when I say that we hope it will inspire Americans to see the value of Asian carp. It’s a terribly misunderstood fish. What Angie and her business (Two Rivers Fisheries) are aiming to do is to “reduce, re-use and RE-DEFINE” carp. Rather than see it as a “trash fish”, we can learn how to use it as a resource. It’s an abundant protein source that can be harvested to address both the ecological degradation and economic hardship associated with its proliferation. As much as we would like to think that we can fully contain or eliminate them, it’s simply not going to happen. When Asian carp arrive somewhere, they are - for better or worse - there to stay. We need to focus our resources and energy on finding ways to manage their presence. We hope this film is a start in that direction. Any fun facts about the film/program, the subject matter or the production crew that might surprise the audience? AC: Silver carp, one of the four types of Asian carp, are the shiny ones that leap out of the water when they’re spooked by noises from motors (see the first scene of our short film). When a boater is cruising down a waterway at 20+ mph and one of those silver carp leap out, it can do serious damage. People have dislocated jaws and shoulders because of being hit by flying carp on a moving motorboat. Some fishermen are starting to install plexiglass shields on the front of their boats so they don’t get hit!
We reached out to our Jackson Wild Media Awards filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
Questions answered by Producer Mark Fletcher and Composer Barnaby Taylor Two gibbons, miles apart, have a professor and a musician to act as high-tech matchmakers, to help them find each other…by telephone! The story is more opera than the natural history. Our young would-be lovers are Skywalker gibbons, a new species announced in 2017. There are only a handful of them, scattered along a mountain range on the border of Myanmar and China. Without a musical courtship of singing a duet together across a valley they will never become a couple. What the team are about to do has never been tried before. This is a spectacular story about wild animals, love, and music. What inspired this story? The music of animals, and the discovery that they live their life in song. The science gave amazing insight into emotion, and music could bring that to life. That’s very rare of course. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film/program? Musically, it was very brave, but if you are lucky, have a brilliant composer, it can work. In terms of filming, it took 10 years in the most inhospitable environment with restricted access, an inexperienced crew, a rare and nervous species, and no obvious outcome. Hard. What did you learn from your experience making this film/program? Music can be used in complex and original ways to bring animals to life. It can give them a voice. How do you approach storytelling? Stories can be told in music as well as science and drama, and that originality is important. What impact do you hope this film/program will have? I hope it will inspire people to want to be scientists. And also to be musicians and writers, and storytellers. Were there any surprising or meaningful moments/experiences you want to share? Working with Barnaby Taylor on this was a highlight. He gave me the tools and confidence to try something really original. As far as filming went, connecting a wild species in conversation live with a zoo species 3000 miles away was a lifetime moment. Any fun facts about the film/program, the subject matter or the production crew that might surprise the audience?The Chinese pop song about the lonely gibbon continues to be performed in concert. Only one person on the crew spoke English. The hard-bitten scientists became so emotionally entangled in the story that the challenge of when and how to intervene to save a species became a big part of the filming. Anything else you would like people to know? The operatic pieces were sung specially for the program. The Chinese pop song about the lonely gibbon continues to be performed in concert. The idea that music can give an animal a voice, and let an audience into their world, is important. What next? Singing snow leopards? Not really. This was a one-off. When it comes to composition... Music for A Song for Love, by Barnaby Taylor. ● What a gift for a composer - a film based around sound and music, where song is at the very centre of our lead characters’ lives. When director Mark Fletcher came to me and suggested an operatic theme, I was intrigued. I immersed myself in the great Romantic operas, including Offenbach’s ‘Tales of Hoffman’. From here I worked with original recordings to develop my own themes and arrangements, to support the operatic drama of the story. A minor key waltz for piano and orchestra recurs throughout, alongside an uplifting and passionate reimagining of Offenbach’s ‘Barcarolle’ this time including a male vocal part performed by opera singer Mark Oldfield, plus an eclectic range of synthetic and unusual sounds to bridge the gap between the romantic past of operatic arias, to the present-day where the gibbon matchmakers are a couple of professors and pop star.
We reached out to our Jackson Wild Media Awards filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
#NatureNow Finalist Trailer from Jackson Wild on Vimeo. Were there any surprising or meaningful experiences you want to share? Director Tom Mustill: We did not expect the film to be viewed very much, perhaps a few hundred thousand views, but when we released it it went viral, clocking up over 70 million views and even being tweeted by heads of state, with Natural Climate Solutions being a big part of the UN climate and sustainable goals summits discussions in September in climate week. The meaningful part of this is that most of those views came as an accident of our distribution strategy - instead of releasing it on one site as is the received wisdom, we gave it away under a Creative Commons (CC) license to anyone who wanted to host it/ show it. An unexpected consequence of this was that the places it received the most views were sites we would not have expected - 20 million on the FB page of the musician who leant us his music for instance - far more than on Greta's and our sponsors official pages where we expected most of the views to be. Hopefully more films will take this approach and give their films away under CC licenses. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film/program? TM: We wanted to have the smallest possible environmental footprint ourselves while making this film. To accomplish this we took trains to Sweden and electric cars in the UK, powered our edit on green energy, had no single use anything, ate veggie and only used recycled stock footage (apart from the two interviews). This reduced our total footprint to 180kg of carbon. We paid to offset this 4x over (so the carbon would be captured sooner) in Natural Climate Solutions making the production carbon neutral. We wanted to show this was possible on a high production value film. What inspired this story? TM: I met George Monbiot and he told me about Natural Climate Solutions / Nature Based Solutions - how by protecting and restoring natural systems we could help limit the climate crisis, and how nobody knew about them or was funding them. He had written a joint letter with Greta Thunberg and others to try to get decision makers to invest in NCS and use them. With the UN General Assembly and Climate Week approaching it seemed an important story, so I decided to make a short simple public information film in my spare time to try to make NCS and the organisations championing them taken seriously and talked about. How do you approach storytelling? TM: I wanted to keep it as simple and authentic as possible - Greta and George speak directly to the viewer, in the way that they would talk to you if you were sat with them at home in their kitchen. I wanted the film to feel fresh but to re-use footage, so we animated existing footage together with a different pace and style as you normally see to give a feeling of the colossal land use changes taking place and the potential of the natural world. The point of the film wasn't to depress people about how much trouble we are in, but to give them a feeling of the potential of NCS and to give them something they could do to help so the structure is heavily weighted towards solutions and action rather than problems - this is different from many environmental films which spend lots of time talking about problems and solutions are often only introduced at the very end if at all. I guess in style it is a sort of mash up of public information film, music video and vlog - it is much more in keeping with what we make and watch online on social media than in traditional natural history and television shorts. Anything else you would like people to know? TM: I would encourage people making films about nature and climate to get much more adventurous with their style and storytelling techniques - many environmental and advocacy films are formulaic - in their editing, in their content, in their style and pace and music and everything. As soon as one starts playing you think 'I know what this is' and you switch off, particularly if it is depressing. As communicators we are losing opportunities of reaching people with important stories about the natural world because we think we have to tell all our stories in the same way. I didn't know that this film would work so well, and you never do until you try. So I'd encourage people who watch this to try their own new ways of telling stories like this, because we urgently need to reach different and diverse audiences and that means we need to make different and diverse films.
We reached out to our Jackson Wild Media Awards filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
Akashinga Finalist Trailer from Jackson Wild on Vimeo. What inspired this story? Director Maria Wilhelm: "Akashinga: The Brave Ones" is a philanthropic commitment, as much as a short film, and the result of more than 12 years traveling back and forth to Africa as a trustee of the African Wildlife Foundation. The film was inspired by the women who inspired me—their grit and guts, their against-all-odds determination to transform themselves, their communities and the practice of conservation. They have lessons to teach us all about sacrifice and about the power of sisterhood, about what happens when a community comes together to protect and preserve its treasures, its wildlife, and its wildlands. In particularly divisive times globally, the Akashinga rangers show us there’s another, better, way. And they are brave, indeed. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film/program? MW: There weren’t any. As a program of the International Anti-Poaching Foundation (IAPF), Akashinga was an honor to cover. These women’s lives are brutally hard, but they are also resplendent in their triumph over trauma, in their abundant joy, and in their generosity. Making the “Akashinga” film was a gift to everyone involved. What did you learn from your experience making this film/program? MW: What’s worth fighting for? That’s the motivating, potent and highly individual question we all have to answer. The Atlantic archive features an essay from its December 1915 issue by the philosopher Ralph Barton Perry with that title. He writes, “Civilization is not saved by the mere purging of one’s heart, but by the work of one’s hands. The forces of destruction must be met, each according to its kind, by the forces of deliverance.” The Akashinga rangers are just that—deliverance. The work of their hands benefits us all. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1915/12/what-is-worth-fighting-for/528915/ How do you approach storytelling? MW: I don’t have an approach. Some stories tell themselves; each has its own integrity. “Akashinga” was a story on a platter, as I’ve characterized it, and very easy to tell. Our tiny, highly collaborative and interdependent, five-person film team, dominantly African, tried to tell it in a somewhat more intimate and emotional manner. What impact do you hope this film/program will have? MW: Every choice we made and every single thing we’re doing now is about a calculable impact. Jim Cameron, with whom I’ve been honored to work for many years, often says, “Hope is not a strategy. Luck is not a factor. Fear is not an option.” That is, we’re not hoping. We’re working hard to bring attention to the remarkable women of Akashinga through our longstanding and deeply valued partnership with National Geographic and through every other partner and affiliate we have. Poaching is on the rise in various African nations due to COVID and the loss of some billions in revenue derived from tourism. It’s an even more desperate time for rural communities. We have to be fearless in the fight and, maybe, a little lucky. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2020/04/wildlife-safaris-halted-for-covid-boost-poaching-threat/ Any fun facts about the film/program, the subject matter or the production crew that might surprise the audience? MW: The Akashinga rangers eat an all-vegan diet. Grown locally, made on an open fire and without the benefit of refrigeration (no power in a bush camp), the food rivals and surpasses the best vegan fare anywhere. The Akashinga kitchen produced 54, 853 meals in 2019 to serve 171 rangers, trainees and staff. https://vegfund.org/activist-story/akashinga-vegan-warriors Akashinga Back to Black Roots Vegan Kitchen and Garden • prepares healthy and tasty camp meals and tactical rations for Akashinga staff, • focuses on reintroducing and encouraging traditional African eating habits, • uses local, readily available traditional foods. "Under Chef Cola’s supervision, the kitchen provides three meals a day to 171 people housed at IAPF’s (International Anti-Poaching Foundation) camp in Nyamakati (rural Zimbabwe). Those on patrol carry rations to sustain them while in the bush. This process can be tricky because temperatures in Nyamakati are extremely hot, making food go bad quickly. And, for tactical reasons, rangers can’t keep fires going for cooking or reheating. The solution? A food dryer prepares dry fruits and vegetables that will travel well and be light in their packs. Their work doesn’t stop at preparing nutritious meals and rations, though. The kitchen also raises awareness by discussing environmental conservation and animal welfare, from bushmeat poaching to the negative effects that eating meat has on their land and communities.” Anything else you would like people to know? MW: In the fight worth fighting, stories matter. Malaika Vaz was interviewed by Robin McGahey, guest writer Malaika Vaz is a National Geographic Explorer, wildlife presenter, and filmmaker and most recently one of the recipients for the Nat Geo COVID-19 Emergency Fund for Journalists. Unlike the majority of us, Malaika spent her lockdown on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic in India, exploring the challenges facing migrant workers during this time in her new film Refugees at Home, that has been streaming on local TV channels in India, and was published online by The Quint. I got the chance to sit down with her to hear about her story, experience in the field during the lockdown, and her outlook coming out of it.
Q: The film is called Refugees at Home. What inspired you to focus on migrant workers in Goa? There are large populations of migrant workers in Goa, due to the various industries in the state. I knew they would be some of the hardest hit, but I never quite expected to hear or see what I did. I was born and raised in Goa, so this film offered me an opportunity to not only dive into learning about the impact that COVID is having on different communities but also understanding more about a place I call home. Q: What did you find working with migrant workers? What did they say? There is this huge tussle because migrant workers are coming from remote parts of India and coming into these big cities in the hopes of gaining work opportunities. They live paycheck to paycheck, but when the lockdown began, they suddenly had no work for months. It’s incredibly unsettling as you’ve gotta remember that these people are by no means beggars or dependent on the state. They work hard during the year and live a life of dignity, all so that they can put three meals on the table a day for their families. Right now though, due to the shut economy, they can no longer provide for themselves. Q: What have been some of the hardest things you’ve seen while filming? Interviewing migrants who were a part of India’s COVID-19 spurred mass exodus and hearing their stories was possibly the most heartbreaking part. With the shut down of industry due to the virus, many migrants who often work in the informal sector could no longer depend on their daily earnings. And with no reserves of savings to fall back on, their only way out was heading back to their families in the villages and towns they call home. But due to the lockdowns out here which were some of the strictest in the world, all transportation including buses and trains were shut - prompting thousands to attempt a long, dangerous and often life-threatening journey of hundreds of thousands and kilometers. Many died of exhaustion, train/road accidents, suicide, and incidents of police brutality. That really hit my core. Q: Was there a story that particularly stood out to you? While filming this documentary, I met a man originally from Madhya Pradesh who came to Goa for work two weeks before the government lockdown due to COVID-19. After he lost his job, he couldn’t feed himself, and wanted to be with his family - so he decided to walk the 1500 km back home because there was no bus or train running for another two months. Unfortunately, the police stopped him on his way and he was forced to stay in Goa. His story speaks to me of the larger story of inequality within my country, which is further exacerbated in the grip of a pandemic. Q: You focus a large part of the film on the women that you encountered. Can you talk a little bit about what drove your narrative towards them in the end? Originally, the people I interviewed through the shoot just happened to be men. This is possibly because men are often the ones that are more visible in society. One day though, I was interviewing this construction worker and his wife came out and offered me a cup of chai and we began talking. It was at that moment that I realized I was missing an important part of the larger narrative - the impact of this pandemic on migrant women. So, that’s when I steered more of the film in that direction. During times of crisis, women in vulnerable communities are impacted the most. They are already ostracized within their communities, forced to take on this huge burden of fending for their family and looking after their kids, as well as earning enough to support their families. There have been spikes in domestic violence and many women don’t always have access to basic nutrition, as in many poorer households in India - women eat last. And when there’s not enough food for everyone - they don’t eat at all. Through my film, I wanted to highlight the fact that financial independence and empowerment is so important for women all through the year, and in the midst of a crisis - this need is only made clearly evident. For example, towards the end of the documentary, you meet an incredibly resilient woman named Rupali. The second time I went to speak with her, to check on her and her family, she was in the process of packing up her entire house overnight. Her family was evicted from their home of over a decade, almost overnight as they couldn’t afford to pay their rent given the collapse of our economy and the loss of jobs. Q: Who is the target audience for this film? The primary audience for this film is local audiences within India. Through this grant, Nat Geo encouraged the democratization of journalism by allowing and encouraging grantees to get our content out on local media ecosystems. Refugees at Home has been broadcast on a local television network and online on one of India’s largest online media networks - The Quint. This is a film of the people, for the people, so I really wanted to ensure that it went back to them and was accessible. Q: What impact do you hope to have with this film? While making this documentary, I collaborated with a team of public policy researchers from a network known as the Stranded Workers Action Network in India - that are working to understand what interventions are required to protect migrant communities. Together we worked on a list of key recommendations to the state and industry that were added to the end of the film in graphic form, focusing on rural employment guarantee schemes, universalized ration distribution, and wage compensation amongst others. I really wanted my audience to be able to immerse themselves in the lives and struggles of the migrant worker community - but also understand what the steps are to actually tangibly lookout for these communities in the midst of the lockdown and in the months that follow. These are painful times, and historic times - and to me as a presenter and filmmaker, it’s important to document this struggle so that we’re collectively inspired to act faster and with more precision to safeguard the rights of vulnerable migrant workers right now in the midst of these cataclysmic times and so that we’re more prepared when the next crisis hits us. Q: What was your team like? It was really funny because the team I usually work with isn’t in Goa as the borders shut down. So, I worked with a local wedding filmmaker for this project - it was great and now he’s interested in documentary filmmaking after this film! My friend Taira was the editor of the film. Despite being from the same place, Taira and I only met last year at Jackson Wild, and so when we started shooting I called her up and she came on board, bringing her editing expertise and passion to this film! Thank you to Jackson Wild for that! Q: What are your biggest takeaways from your time on this film? My films for television usually focus on stories of biodiversity loss and conservation issues. What I’ve realized is that whether it is environmental change or a pandemic, when it comes to the biggest challenges humanity faces today - it is always our most vulnerable communities that are the most impacted and underserved. There is a larger systemic social bias towards migrant and marginalized workers that we as a nation need to face. Since the shutdown, there’s been an increase in police brutality, and a general dismissal of migrant needs - not to mention all of the health risks that they are exposed to given the close quarters they share with hundreds of other people. Across the world, we are witnessing a wave of critical conversations on equality and inclusion with communities standing up for historically marginalized people - and while that might be BPOC communities in the US, I think for my country - focusing on the needs and rights of our migrant community is crucial right now during this pandemic - and after. Q: After having created this film, how do you think about your work as a wildlife filmmaker? Do you plan on continuing down this path? As a filmmaker, I honestly believe stories are stories. And what’s most important to me is to work on every single film with all my passion and with the intent of amplifying the voice of communities on the ground to create a positive impact. But I have to say that after making Refugees at Home, I’m definitely ready to experiment with a diversity of stories - whether it is filming stories of wildlife in jungles or investigating marine trafficking or going on the frontlines of a pandemic - I’m excited for what’s next. Here’s the link to watch Malaika’s documentary and read her article on India’s COVID-19 spurred migrant crisis. Check it out! By Guest Writer Robin McGahey Jahawi Bertolli is a Wildlife Photographer/Cameraman, Freediver, Music Producer, Co-Founder of East African Ocean Explorers Club, and 2019 National Geographic Explorer from Kenya. In honor of World Oceans Day, we talked with Jahawi to hear about his love of the water, experience as a diver, and his upcoming film, Behari Yetu. Q: First things first, how did you get into underwater filmmaking? It’s been a bit of a roundabout. I started with dance music, was signed with a label and was DJing and having fun in London. When I moved back to Kenya, I went from working on dance music to writing music for documentaries. Eventually, I got kind of fed up with sitting in a studio in Nairobi and decided I wanted to get out in the beautiful locations. The thing is though that wildlife filmmaking in Kenya is quite an elite club and I had no real camera experience. There are very few job opportunities and it’s difficult to get contracts. I still kept making dance-oriented music and one day we had been shooting a music video for a song that a friend and I had collaborated on and we needed an underwater shot so I jumped in the pool with a group and got the shots. I have always been very comfortable underwater holding my breath and my cousin, who was directing the shoot, joked that I should go and become an underwater cameraman and the seed was planted. I did a bit of research, found a course in Thailand, finished the project I was working on, and left. What was supposed to be a few months away ended up in 2 years living on an island in Thailand, training, becoming a Divemaster, free diving, and working on anything I could. Q: Did you grow up around the ocean? I grew up in Nairobi, but we had a house on the south coast of Kenya, in a wild part of the coast called Waa, that we would go to often. As a child, I would spend all day outside. I loved exploring and just being in the ocean, I’ve always felt very comfortable with it. Q: Are there any specific moments of your underwater filmmaking career that specifically stand out? Getting to the Galápagos was a big one. It was just such an incredible place with the most amazing biodiversity. I never thought I would get there so early on in my career. What’s been the most fun though is exploring more of Kenya’s coastline. A lot of the work that I did was in Thailand or the Galapagos, and then most of my dive training was in and around South East Asia. I’ve come to appreciate Kenya’s coastline more. Especially after being able to go around the world and see what’s out there. There are truly some special places here, especially the ones that no one knows about. Q: Have you recently had close encounters with some of the large marine animals? We set out to make a film on humpback whales last year, but we had one of the worst seasons on record, with such low turnout. I managed to get a couple of close up shots of them, but, as the focus of our film changed and we moved to the Lamu Archipelago, we began to encounter Whale Sharks much more often, and very close up. They were young, only about 3-4 meters, and at that size, they are curious and can spend a long time circling you and checking you out. I’m also very lucky to be able to spend some time with a particular pod of dolphins, which is always so uplifting. Q: What is your process for underwater filmmaking in Kenya? Are there big hoops you have to jump through in terms of regulations? Permits for underwater filmmaking are not as big of an issue for Kenya. Within Marine parks, you have to get permits from the Kenya Wildlife Service alongside your usual filming permits, but otherwise, it’s pretty straight forward. Outside of the marine parks though, you’re pretty free. We focus a lot on educational films for coastal communities and have worked with the Lamu county government before, and through the East African Explorers Club [his and his partner’s company] we are trying to figure out a joint project to set up locally managed marine protected areas. There’s definite interest in Lamu, as a county it wants to create an ocean use plan, similar to their land-use plan in terms of zoning and conservation. We’re very excited to be working with them on that. Bahari Yetu is Jahawi’s current project that he is completing alongside his partner and wife El, as part of his Nat Geo Explorer’s Grant. Q: What is Bahari Yetu? It means “Our Ocean” in Swahili. The story is how the ocean has changed through the eyes of old Swahili fishermen. Q: What inspired you to make this story in the first place? So last year we set out to do a Humpback Whale film, but as I mentioned before, they didn’t show up. During that process, we began interviewing fishermen to find interesting stories about the whales, how long they have been coming, what they had encounters with them, etc… By interviewing these fishermen a lot more came up in terms of issues they are facing, fish stocks declining, the way people are fishing, and we realized these are the guys that have been out on this ocean every day for their entire lives and have first hand seen the change. What people now see as the baseline for a healthy ocean really isn’t, and without these elders, this information could be lost. So by reporting these stories, we realized we could make a film that not only talks about these issues they’re facing, but also reaching into the old Swahili heritage, and hoping to get people to remember that they were custodians of the ocean and we have to be a lot more responsible with how we utilize it. Bahari Yetu became a conduit of these old fishermen’s stories, now coming to life in a film. Q: Why didn’t the Humpback Whales come last year? It’s hard to say, but we guess that it was due to the huge climactic event called the Indian Ocean Dipole, which is similar to El Niño. This meant that our side of the Indian Ocean was a lot warmer than it should have been and that drew a lot of moisture across East Africa. We think because of this temperature imbalance that the whales didn’t have to come up so far to find warm enough water to calve. Aside from the whales, the dipole made everything really strange for us. We had pretty consistent and heavy rain and in November, which is usually a great time for filming, the seas were rough and there was low visibility in the water. We had a few little windows to film in December and January, but it’s been a tough six months. Q: What were some of the other challenges you faced coming into this film? The heavy rains pretty much threw everything out of whack. The seas became rough, more so than expected, and because of the freshwater run-off into the ocean, it turned the water a sort of pea green, rather than its usual blue. Then there were jellyfish blooms, making it difficult to shoot. Worst of all, one of the reefs we’d been filming for years that had been looking really healthy, began to bleach due to the extended period of warm water. It was all hard to see. Q: Who are the audiences that you are targeting? Our main target audience is the coastal communities here in Kenya. We’ve found that the deepest connections between the audience and our subjects are to be formed here, because this is their home and their areas to protect. So we decided to take it a step further and have it all narrated in Swahili. Before COVID, we were hoping to take this film into the communities along the coast and do community screenings. It’s a message from the elder fishermen to the younger generation. Because a large base doesn't have TVs, we were going to set up a mobile cinema in the archipelago and take it to all of the local fishing villages, show the film and some other educational films and have a discussion about the issues. We’re hoping to take it to schools around Kenya as well. It’s still the plan we just have to get over COVID before we do anything, and when we do, we need to make sure we’re doing it correctly. Q: What advice do you have for the future explorers, filmmakers, or the kids seeing this film? We often get really caught up in the idea that we’re not in the right spot and want to go somewhere else, but the truth is that the best stories are the ones you care the most about. Oftentimes those are the ones right in front of you. It’s been really great that after traveling around the world, I get to focus on one spot, spend a lot of time there, and hopefully find something new. Half the time I go out I don’t even press record on my camera, sometimes I leave it behind all together and just take out a GoPro. Technology has improved so much that you have these tiny cameras that can capture great footage at a fraction of the cost of a proper underwater rig. Focus on telling a good story through your shots rather than the camera. There are several clips in the film shot on a GoPro, and it was from just us going out to see what was happening. Q: In your opinion, what’s the biggest threat facing our oceans?
The biggest threat to our oceans is us and our actions. Climate change, overfishing, pollution, it’s just one thing after another and unfortunately, the people most affected by these aren’t the ones doing it, and if they are it is usually out of desperation. The thing is, by looking at it as a whole, it can seem daunting and out of our hands but change can be made on a local scale. Through education and empowerment communities can survive better with the threats coming from climate change, manage fisheries, and pollution. So our message is that we really need to protect the reefs and mangroves and also understand the intangible benefits they give us. We need to realize that there is real value to our ocean and coastal areas, but there has to be local buy-in and real benefits to these communities. The ocean can seem like such a foreign place, especially to those who don’t swim, but it is such a beautiful place and by trying to portray its beauty and fragility through film we’re hoping to get people to fall in love with it, and if they do the better the chance we have of conserving it.
We reached out to our World Wildlife Day Film Showcase filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
What inspired this story? Directors Mark Deeble and Victoria Stone: The inspiration for the story was the culmination of 30 years of observation of elephants interacting with smaller animals - always tangential and never the subject of a film, but storing them away. The trigger was working with elephants in Amboseli in the terrible drought of 2009/10 when we witnessed how sentient and empathetic elephants could be in times of crisis - it made us determined to tell a matriarch’s story but against the background of the extraordinary web of life that depends on the presence of elephants for its existence. What drove you as a filmmaker to focus on biodiversity? MD & VS: We find the web of interconnectivity in the natural world fascinating and inspiring - it has driven every film we have ever made. That we rely on it for our survival as humans, just stimulates our natural desire to share it by telling stories - whether it be how the relationship between fig wasp and fig tree shoulders so much of the tropical natural world, or how there is a vast web of wildlife that depends on the presence of elephants for its existence. We all rely on the interconnectivity of the natural world which is what gives it its resilience - we ignore or forget that at our peril. What impact do you hope this film will have? MD & VS: We want the film to inspire a global audience to fall in love with elephants, to reflect on how like us they are, be amazed at their status as keystone species and then be emotionally moved to want to protect them. We know this is happening as the film has raised a huge amount of money that is being channelled into elephant conservation in Tsavo and habitat restoration outside the national park. We have been 3 years in developing an innovative and ambitious Outreach and Education plan starting in Kenya, donating the rights for a prime-time national broadcast and translating the film into Maa and Kiswahili. It will be launched as a 'National Moment' under the banner ‘Our Country, Our Elephants, Our Heritage’ with the First Lady of Kenya as guest of honour at the Kenyan premiere. We have created 28 learn-to-read books for the Kenyan Government, based on characters from the film so that children can learn to read through stories from the wild and grow up loving and caring for animals - whether it be an elephant, a bullfrog tadpole, a killifish or a dung beetle. The tiny TEQ O&E team has also produced 5 read-along books, 3 school plays, teaching guides, activity packs… plus a mobile cinema to take the film to remote rural communities that are at the forefront of human-wildlife conflict.
We reached out to our World Wildlife Day Film Showcase filmmakers to ask them five questions about the experience of making their films.
What inspired this story? Director and Producer Mariah Wilson: In 2015, I completed a short documentary about rhino poaching (KAZIRANGA) and decided I wanted to take on directing a feature about poaching. But I wanted to find an aspect of the global poaching crisis that wasn’t being told by other filmmakers. I had seen a lot of good media coverage about the elephant poaching crisis in the eastern and southern regions of Africa – but that was mostly talking about savanna elephants. Those are the large and very iconic elephants that are in the open plains and grasslands across the continent. As I began to dig in further, I realized there was much less attention being paid to the plight of the forest elephants in Central Africa. Forest elephants are a very important sub-species; they help shape the forest ecosystem and are vital to its health and existence. But they seemed to be getting mostly ignored in news and documentary coverage at that time, and their population was - and still is - being hit really hard by poaching. We have lost approximately 60% of the African forest elephant population in the last ten years. Current estimates have their population at just 40,000 – down from over 200,000 at the turn of the century. These numbers are staggering. At the current rates of slaughter, they won’t be with us very much longer. I had already read about Sidonie Asseme, the female eco-guard in Cameroon, in a WWF newsletter. I realized she was working in the same area where these threatened forest elephants lived. Then I began reading about other bold conservation efforts in the area, like LAGA’s Wildlife Law Enforcement model and Arthur Sniegon’s sniffer dog team. I realized I wanted to tell the story of what was happening in this overlooked and under-resourced region of Africa. What impact do you hope this film will have? MW: My hope is that this documentary will shed light on the severity of the situation in central Africa, and how damaging the ivory trade is for all species -- humans included. I want audiences to leave Silent Forests with a realistic look at what its like to be on the frontlines of conservation in this region day to day… including the dangers, the rewards, the frustrations – and how good efforts are riddled with challenges from dishonest and inept government entities. One unique thing about this film is that three of the four main characters are from either Cameroon or Congo. So this isn't just a story about figures from the international conservationist community going to save Africa's wildlife. This is about African activists, scientists, and eco-guards and who care deeply about what is happening in their own backyards. The very nature of their work can oftentimes put them at odds with their fellow countrymen, and the risks they assume to protect the animals of the Congo Basin are significant. A way in which I hope SILENT FORESTS will help to transform discourse around the subject of poaching is through telling the story of someone who used to be involved in the ivory trade. I think that the viewpoint of a person who has been on the poaching side will bring nuance to an issue that is normally seen as very black-and-white. Former poacher Jean Paul’s story will hopefully allow viewers to see that those at the bottom level of this criminal trade are not just terrible people who have a bloodlust for slaughtering elephants, but that they are driven to commit an extreme and awful act by grinding and endemic poverty. The regret expressed by Jean Paul represents an often-unheard perspective, and his anti-poaching “support” group highlights one unique solution to the problem of poaching – rehabilitating former poachers by offering them alternate forms of income, and getting them involved on the anti-poaching side with financial incentives. The eventual goal of this project is to invoke a sense of urgency about the plight of the forest elephant, and to show the root causes that keep poaching as problematic as it currently is in Africa -- poverty and corruption. My desire is for SILENT FORESTS to educate the public about this overlooked elephant subspecies, and engage audiences to support groups dedicated to ending the forest elephant poaching epidemic before it’s too late. Describe some of the challenges faced while making this film. MW: It was incredibly hard to film the forest elephants at all! It may sound strange, since they are large animals, but the forest is so dense that they are able to hide very well amongst the trees. They are only really visible in the clearings, where they go to drink water. But our first two shoots were in Southeast Cameroon, where the forest elephant population has been exceptionally hard hit. In general, the estimates are that the entire population of forest elephants has dropped over 60% in the last decade - but in Southeast Cameroon it might be closer to 75% gone. We saw signs of elephants on those first two shoots… their tracks, their dung… but we did not actually see a single forest elephant in Cameroon. The ones that were still there were increasingly wary about coming out into the clearings. It was really distressing – both from a conservation perspective, and a production perspective – I was starting to get nervous that we would never get footage of a forest elephant! Finally, on our third shoot in Congo-Brazzaville, we went out with an elephant biologist who studies the elephants at particular clearings. There, we finally were able to capture footage of them (at nighttime with an infrared camera). It was worth the wait – I think the scenes we got are some of the most magical and powerful in the whole film. But I would say that the difficulties we had filming the elephants in Cameroon and Congo-Brazzaville speak to the effect that poaching has had on their population across Central Africa. What drove you as a filmmaker to focus on biodiversity? My second documentary film called VOLUNTEER, and was about my eco-volunteering experiences in Uganda and Fiji in 2009. It was through those eco-volunteer trips that I began to learn about the uptick in endangered species trafficking around the world. Motivated to do something, my focus in documentaries turned towards wildlife conservation, and our global poaching epidemic. In 2015 I formed House Tiger Productions to consolidate my work on projects that highlight anti-poaching activism -- particularly in areas that don’t receive as much news coverage. I wanted to raise audience awareness about lesser-known vulnerable species – like northeast India’s one-horned rhino, featured in my short doc KAZIRANGA and Central Africa’s forest elephant, featured in SILENT FORESTS (2019) and EEYA. I want to continue fostering and supporting bold, unique storytelling via documentaries -- especially stories within the conservation, animal rescue, and wildlife realms. That area is a specialty niche I have carved out for myself over the last decade, and I feel more passionate about it today than ever before. We are witnessing wildfires wiping out millions of animals, oceans being emptied of marine life, endangered species falling victim to poaching and trafficking… I think species loss from human exploitation is one of the most pressing issues of our time. I want to contribute to moving this conversation forward before it’s too late. |
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