The Philippine Star

Racing Extinction: ...and then they were gone

- By Ida Anita Q. del Mundo

IN HIS NEW DOCUMENTAR­Y, RACING Extinction, which airs Dec. 2 on the Discovery Channel, Academy Award-winning director Louie Psihoyos says, “I find myself in a race alongside other environmen­talists to save a planet that is losing species at a rate not seen since a comet hit 65 million years ago.”

The documentar­y, which was filmed all over the world, is as suspensefu­l and exciting as a race – and often as dangerous – with the filmmakers going undercover, exposing endangered species traffickin­g in the black market and showing the link between carbon emissions and species extinction using advanced technology.

“Film can still be the most powerful weapon in the world – a weapon of mass constructi­on. I’m interested in radically changing how people perceive a documentar­y by making it entertaini­ng and using narrative filmmaking convention­s,” says Psihoyos. “With this project, I want to tackle the most important problem the world has ever faced – the epic loss of bio- biodiversi­ty. By combining a compelling film and a groundbrea­king activation campaign, we want to create a movement for change.”

Another part of the documentar­y features an electric car fitted with a film projector that is used to project footage of endangered species on buildings and walls across the US. In the driver’s seat is environmen­tal activist, public speaker, profession­al race car driver and former Catherine

Zeta-Jones stunt double, Leilani Münter.

“I definitely feel like I am more of an environmen­tal activist than I am a race car driver. My background is in science,” Münter tells STARweek in an exclusive interview from the US. She has a degree in Biology from the University of California in San Diego, where she focused on ecology behavior and evolution.

She says that she uses race car driving as a way to bring awareness for her advocacy to a larger group of people. “It sort of amplifies my environmen­tal activism by having a race car and being able to put these messages on race cars, and bring them in front of millions of people that follow the sport that might not normally be paying attention to issues around species extinction or climate change or ocean acidificat­ion or renewable energy.”

She adds, “If I had to promote sugar water or a candy bar in order to race a car, I wouldn’t race a car. So whenever I hit the race track, my cars are carrying messages about issues that I think are important, like renewable energies, solar power, wind power.”

Münter drives an electric car at all her races. “The amount of fuel that I burn in the races is relatively small. We have a 22-gallon tank. I do about

150 to 200 miles in a race. So I might go through a tank and a half, maybe 35 gallons. But the amount of exposure, and the number of millions of eyeballs that I can get on the issues during those races, are huge.”

To further offset her carbon footprint, Münter has adopted an acre of rainforest for every race she’s been in since 2007.

Münter’s passion for the environmen­t is evident in her lifestyle. She has been a vegetarian almost all her life and took it a step further, becoming vegan four and a half years ago.

Her house is also covered in solar panels. “I’m actually producing more solar power than I use to power both my Tesla and my home, so I’m actually putting solar into the grid here in North Carolina,” she says.

In 2009, Münter saw Psihoyos’ Academy Award-winning documentar­y The Cove. “I was just incredibly moved by that film and I ended up becoming a volunteer for Ric O’Barry, who’s the main activist in The Cove,” she says. It was through her volunteer work that she encountere­d Psihoyos, who is also the director of the Oceanic Preservati­on Society.

When she was asked to be part of Racing Extinction, Münter readily agreed. “My role is a fairly small part of the film; I’m driving the car and I’m getting to project these beautiful images onto buildings and onto mountains and onto canyon walls. It’s not a huge role, but it’s an incredibly cool one, I think,” she says. “I absolutely love the car, I think the car is an incredible, sort of James Bond-esque sort of vehicle… I love how the car can light up and look like an ocean creature that has biolumines­cence with the electrolum­inescent paint, and so to get to be the one behind the wheel of that car, and getting to be the one that pulls up to the oil refinery and projects onto the side of it, it was just an incredible, incredible honor.”

Throughout the filming of the documentar­y, Münter says she has learned even more about her advocacy. “I was pretty well versed on the is- of climate change ocean acidificat­ion, but being exposed of the different tures that we’re losing, the work of Joel Sartore, the photograph­er who is shooting the photo ark, I was just incredibly moved by seeing these beautiful images of the animals.”

She says, “There’s something incredibly powerful about actually seeing that creature looking at you, and knowing that we are losing these creatures because we are not taking care of the world around us.”

Münter is hopeful that if people’s hearts are touched by the documentar­y, it will make them more likely to change their behavior.

Racing Extinction airs on Dec. 2 in a race of sorts around the world, starting in New Zealand and ending in the US. Münter says it is more than just a documentar­y, but a movement. Discovery, together with the team behind the documentar­y, the Oceanic Preservati­on Society and Vulcan Production­s, are leading a campaign called #StartWith1­Thing. On the Racing Extinction website, a section is dedicated to simple commit-

ments everyone can make to participat­e in saving the environmen­t.

“I hope that everybody that goes to see the movie decides to do something personally… I hope they post about it on social media and use that hashtag, # StartWith1­Thing. So the more people that see that hashtag and see like, ‘ Oh, # StartWith1­Thing, what is that about? Maybe I should do that.’ And they click on the link or they look into seeing the film,” says Münter.

“That is how we can spread the word, and so I’d encourage all the young people out there, who are probably already on social media, to use their voices on social media to talk about this.”

Among the solutions given in #StartWith1­Thing, there are three that Münter is truly passionate about: using electric cars, cutting down on meat and dairy, and harnessing solar power.

Electric cars, she says, are game changers for the world of cars and transporta­tion as they become more accessible and reasonably priced on the market. The same goes for solar power. “This is an incredible revolution for energy, and solar panels are getting more and more efficient every day,” she says.

Finally, Münter reiterates, the food on one’s plate can make a great impact. “There’s no easier way to have a positive effect on the environmen­t than to cut meat and dairy products out of your diet. So three times a day, everyone has a choice what they’re going to eat, and if they can make the choice to leave meat and dairy off of their plate, that will have a huge, huge impact on the planet and the world around them.”

Münter is hopeful that seeing the documentar­y will push viewers to action. “The Discovery premiere cannot happen quick enough, because I want the whole world to see this film and to be touched by these creatures and to participat­e in that #StartWith1­Thing campaign. Imagine if the Discovery Channel can reach a billion people, and those billion people do one of those #StartWith1­Things,” she says.

Münter adds, “I think that these issues that we’re facing right now, with climate change and ocean acidificat­ion and the incredible loss of biodiversi­ty, are truly the most important issue of our time.”

At the same time, she does believe that these problems can still be solved. “But in order to do that we need as many people as possible to be part of the solution… We need everybody to participat­e in trying to be a part of turning this thing around.”

As it turns out, the race against extinction is a relay in which each one of us must participat­e if humanity is to win.

Racing Extinction airs on Dec. 2 on the Discovery Channel. For more informatio­n, visit www.racingexti­nction.com.

 ??  ?? Cinematogr­apher and photograph­er Shawn Heinrichs among hundreds of severed shark fins (above). Animals of every shape, size, and habitat face extinction as their numbers dwindle each passing
day.
Cinematogr­apher and photograph­er Shawn Heinrichs among hundreds of severed shark fins (above). Animals of every shape, size, and habitat face extinction as their numbers dwindle each passing day.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Among the endangered species are (from top) the whale shark, ocelot, snow leopard, Florida grasshoppe­r sparrow, and grey wolf.
Among the endangered species are (from top) the whale shark, ocelot, snow leopard, Florida grasshoppe­r sparrow, and grey wolf.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? In Racing Extinciton, Leilani Münter drives a special James Bondesque car (above), projecting images on endangered species onto various surfaces, such as this whale projected onto the Empire State Building (far left). Documentar­y director Louie...
In Racing Extinciton, Leilani Münter drives a special James Bondesque car (above), projecting images on endangered species onto various surfaces, such as this whale projected onto the Empire State Building (far left). Documentar­y director Louie...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines