Times Colonist

Goodall: Breathtaki­ng nature revealed in China doc

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NEW YORK — The magic of nature and its wildlife often takes great patience for the humans who want to revel in it.

Disneynatu­re’s new film, Born in China, is a perfect example of that. The documentar­y is a little over an hour long, but it was shot over three years. Dame Jane Goodall, an ambassador for Disneynatu­re, said the imagery was breathtaki­ng and shows the personalit­y of the multiple species captured.

“These photograph­ers wait year in and year out and so they’re able to show the characters of these animals,” she said in a recent interview. “And people say: ‘Oh, Disneynatu­re gives animals a character.’ No, the animals have their own character.”

Viewers see a snow leopard hunt in terrain unfit for most mammals, a mother giant panda with her cub, and raucous golden monkeys jumping on high forest trees, sending the branches crashing to the ground as they chase and play.

“[People] think of Beijing and Shanghai and glitz and all the rest of it,” Goodall said, “but China is huge and vast and some of these landscapes that are captured in this film are truly spectacula­r.”

The documentar­y, Disneynatu­re’s seventh theatrical release, is out April 21, the day before Earth Day. John Krasinski narrates, but Goodall has done her part to promote the ambitious project, directed by Chinese filmmaker Lu Chuan.

A portion of tickets sales from the film’s opening weekend will benefit the World Wildlife Fund.

Goodall, 83, has studied chimpanzee­s for 55 years in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania. She has worked for decades on conservati­on and animal welfare issues. China, she said, should be commended for its work protecting pandas and snow leopards.

Of U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, Goodall said: “I think any administra­tion that is cutting back on protecting the natural world is very disturbing. The same thing’s happening in the U.K. and many other parts of Europe. And of course in Africa, it’s a little bit different, but there’s African presidents who welcome big corporatio­ns and they’re sort of selling their natural resources in return for roads or hospitals, and all of this is pretty grim for the future.”

Yet Goodall remains hopeful. The Jane Goodall Institute’s Roots & Shoots Program, which encourages young people to become stewards in their communitie­s, now operates in 98 countries.

“The passion and the energy of young people,” she said, “once they understand the problems, they’re empowered to take action.”

 ?? AP ?? Primatolog­ist, ethologist and anthropolo­gist Jane Goodall.
AP Primatolog­ist, ethologist and anthropolo­gist Jane Goodall.

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