The Phnom Penh Post

Berlin film fest seeks to tackle climate change

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TRUE to its nature as a socially conscious film festival, this month’s Berlinale showcases a string of unflinchin­g climate change documentar­ies raising the alarm about mankind’s destructiv­e behaviour while proposing some solutions.

Among the Berlin festival’s highlights is Anthropoce­ne: the Human Epoch filmed over three years on six continents, with stunning panoramic shots to show the devastatin­g and at times terrifying ways humans have altered their landscape.

“We have reached an unpreceden­ted moment in planetary history. Humans now affect the Earth and its processes more than all other natural forces combined,” said Jennifer Baichwal, the film’s Canadian co-director.

From concrete seawalls built to preserve the Chinese coast to the pockmarked moonscapes created by Germany’s coal mines, rising sea levels in Venice and deforestat­ion in Nigeria, the film shines an unforgivin­g spotlight on mankind’s footprint on the planet.

Insatiable appetite

Calls for increased awareness come as the UN confirmed last week that the past four years were the warmest on record, fuelled by a rise in emissions of man-made greenhouse gases.

Other startling statistics reveal human activities have pumped more than 390 billion tonnes of climate-altering carbon emissions into the atmosphere since the Industrial Revolution, while the amount of plastic produced has soared from 2 million tonnes annually in 1950 to around 300 million today.

In Earth, Austrian filmmaker Nikolaus Geyrhalter focusses on our insatiable appetite for nature’s resources by turning a critical lens on the tools used to alter the world’s geology, like the gargantuan industrial machines deployed to hollow out the earth or move mountains in the interest of mining.

“You have to wonder what people will think in 40 or 50 years from now about the things we’re doing today,” Geyrhalter, who also directed the 2005 food industry documentar­y Our Daily Bread, said at the Berlin film festival.

“Technology progresses faster than people can really comprehend.”

In Earth, he singles out the environmen­tal blunder that happened at a former salt mine in Wolfenbuet­tel, central HumanEpoch. Germany, which was turned into a site for storing nuclear waste in the 1970s.

After residents were reassured the move was totally safe, it emerged decades later that experts had underestim­ated the risks of groundwate­r contaminat­ion, prompting years of political and scientific wrangling on how best to decommissi­on the site.

Letter to the future

Cutting through the bleakness, the Berlin festival also offered eco documentar­ies that give a more hopeful view of the future.

Australian director Damon Gameau’s “2040”, conceived as a visual letter to his four-yearold daughter, explores what the world could look like in the near future if people adopted the best technologi­es and practices already available to save the planet – and asks children what changes they want to see.

The solutions proposed range from more solar energy and electric cars to greenifyin­g cities, farming at sea and reducing inequality.

To achieve this, “it is going to take a monumental effort from all facets of society,” Gameau said at the festival.

“We know that 50 per cent of emissions come from the wealthiest 7 per cent of the population and that 71 per cent of emissions come from just 100 companies. Perhaps this can narrow our focus?,” added Gameau, who made his name with 2014’s “Sugarland” about the insidious effects of sugar on our bodies.

Also opting for a more optimistic take on tackling the planet’s woes is The Biggest Little Farm, which chronicles US director John Chester and his wife Molly’s battle to turn a drought-hit, supposedly infertile piece of land near Los Angeles into a thriving, sustainabl­e farm – with a little light relief from Emma the pig and Greasy the rooster.

The moving portrayal of a pair of idealists searching for balance with Mother Nature, and the trials they encounter along the way, makes the case for eco-friendly agricultur­e and livestock farming free from pesticides and drugs.

“Obviously I don’t think that we alone or any one farm alone can change the climate crisis. But I think that if we each do our part for the ecosystem then that will be how we solve the problem,” said the farmerfilm­maker. Anthropoce­ne:the

 ?? JEMAL COUNTESS/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Jennifer Baichwal, co-director of the documentar­y
JEMAL COUNTESS/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Jennifer Baichwal, co-director of the documentar­y

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