Campus News

2012 EcoFocus Film Festival to open with Sundance winner

The 2012 EcoFocus Film Festival will open with a screening of Buck, a documentary about the animal-human bond. The camera follows cowboy Buck Brannaman as he teaches people to communicate with horses using compassion instead of punishment. Winner of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival Audience Favorite Award, Buck is one of 18 feature-length and 22 short films to be shown at EcoFocus, which this year runs March 23-31 at Ciné and various locations across campus.

EcoFocus, an initiative of the Odum School of Ecology, features top-quality feature-length, short and children’s films addressing a range of environmental issues in conjunction with special events, panel discussions and question-and-answer sessions with filmmakers in person or via live video chat. As in previous years, audience members also will vote for their favorite feature-length, short and children’s films, which will be announced
March 31 at closing night festivities.

Among the multiple-award winning films selected for this year’s festival are Academy Award nominee If A Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front, about a radical environmental group; Blood in the Mobile, about the connection between  cell phones and human rights abuses in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where minerals needed for their manufacture are mined; and Revenge of the Electric Car, which chronicles the recent comeback of these vehicles.

Special events include opening and closing night parties March 23 and 31, EcoKids short films and family-friendly films March 25 and a bike film event and party at Little Kings with music by Hope for Agoldensummer.

Special mid-week on-campus screenings include Sushi: The Global Catch at the Georgia Museum of Art on March 29. Filmmaker Mark Hall and a panel of marine ecosystem experts and restaurateurs will discuss the ecological implications as sushi increases in worldwide popularity. An environmental selection from the George Foster Peabody Awards Archive will be shown March 28 in room 271 of the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries.

Other notable films include The City Dark, about light pollution and the vanishing night sky; and Semper Fi: Always Faithful, which tells the story of Marine Corps Master Sgt. Jerry Ensminger, who lost his young daughter to leukemia and then discovered toxic chemicals have been contaminating tap water at Camp Lejeune since the 1950s. Ensminger and Mike Partain, whose story also is chronicled in the film, will be on hand for an audience discussion after the
showing.

The festival closes with You’ve Been Trumped, which chronicles the fight by residents of northern Scotland to stop Donald Trump from turning an environmentally sensitive stretch of coast into a luxury golf resort.

EcoFocus also will host a special free pre-festival screening of YERT: Your Environmental Road Trip, a “docu-comedy” that follows three friends as they travel across the U.S. looking for ecological innovators tackling the world’s environmental challenges with creativity and joy. YERT will be shown March 21 at 7 p.m. at the Miller Learning Center.

Tickets to most EcoFocus events are either $5 or free. Passes also are available. Tickets to opening and closing night parties are $15.