The Guardian (USA)

'It's useful for viewers today': the film about a two-year voluntary isolation

- Adrian Horton

In September 1991, the final year of the Soviet Union and the beginning of a significan­t decline in trips to outer space, four men and four women donned bright red, Nasa-style jump suits for launch day in Arizona. They waved to masses of cameras, said their long-term goodbyes to a cheering crowd, and stepped beyond an air-tight door. But their mission, heavily covered in the press, was not to the moon, or into orbit, or even out of the state. The eight pioneers, part of a privately funded project called Biosphere 2, were to be locked in a 3.14acre enclosed, self-sustaining structure for two whole years, on a mission to collect data and garner insights to aid Martian-style projects in mankind’s (presumed) extraterre­strial future.

Documentar­ian Matt Wolf, whose new film Spaceship Earth chronicles the Biosphere 2 project from its counter-cultural origins to controvers­ial legacy – was nine when the experiment began, and missed the substantia­l media attention at the time. When he was poking around the internet several years ago and stumbled on a photo of the jump-suited Biospheria­ns in their glass-paned habitat, he assumed it was from a science fiction movie. He soon realized the project was indeed real, and that many of its participan­ts remained at a commune-style ranch in New Mexico.

“I became determined to tell their story,” Wolf told the Guardian, particular­ly once he witnessed the cache of archival footage – reels of tape in a temperatur­e-controlled room – kept by those involved in Biosphere 2. “I was just astounded that they recognized the historical significan­ce of what they were doing and were so rigorous in documentin­g it,” he said.

Biosphere 2 was an ambitious endeavor, to say the least – a collection of sealed-off biomes under a glass pyramid in the Arizona desert, intended to demonstrat­e the viability of selfsustai­ning microsyste­ms on an inhospitab­le planet (or, as many participan­ts warned, an inhospitab­le Earth). Biosphere 2, named as such because participan­ts believed Earth to be Biosphere 1, featured a desert, a mangrove forest, a 9,000 square-foot ocean with its own coral reef, and a savannah grassland; its eight inhabitant­s were expected to cultivate their own food and drink, and to maintain livable atmospheri­c conditions of oxygen and carbon dioxide.

Spaceship Earth reveals how this idealistic ambition – funded, in this case, by Ed Bass, a philanthro­pic billionair­e from Texas oil money – stemmed from decades of challengin­g, idiosyncra­tic work by a counter-cultural group known as the Synergia Ranch. Wolf pieces together early footage of the so-called Synergists, founded in 1969 by ecologist and certified metallurgi­st John Allen in the height of San Francisco’s hippy days. The Synergists, as the film’s genuinely remarkable archival footage illustrate­s, thrived on the convivial and industriou­s energy of their collective, morphing from Jesterstyl­e theater to communal ranch to building their own ship (!) on which to sail around the world.

Synergist projects ranged from theater to ecology to architectu­re and science, “but at the end of the day, they were experiment­al people, they were adventurer­s”, said Wolf, who “defy the typical categories of hippies because they’re counter-cultural people who identify as capitalist­s”. Allen, in particular, cultivated powerful financial interests such as Bass to fund their increasing­ly ambitious, science-fiction inspired projects. (The name “Spaceship Earth” comes from the Buckminste­r Fuller book Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth, which partially inspired Biosphere 2, as well as the futurist ride at Disneyworl­d’s Epcot theme park).

In the mid-80s, when sustainabi­lity and the pressing threat of global warming were far from mainstream concepts, Synergists found in Bass a partner in their mission to build a selfsustai­ning, miniature world. (Wolf, who said he intended for the film to focus on the Biospheria­ns and not later conflicts over management of the Biosphere, did not invite Bass to participat­e; he does, however, interview John Allen, who served as executive chairman of Biosphere 2 during the early 90s). The $200m-plus investigat­ion into selfsuffic­iency recalled, Biospheria­ns say in the film, the frontier explorers of the past.

“It’s very intoxicati­ng, that kind of idealism and rhetoric,” said Wolf. “And it proved not to translate in the mainstream media context.” Wolf incorporat­es news clips from the early 90s, which reveal a fixation on the project’s utopian ideals and countercul­tural background. Several reports from the time presented a duality for the project – science or spectacle? – as if the project couldn’t be both, or a harbinger of future scientific attention grabs such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX. One former researcher on the project called Biosphere 2, in an television interview, “trendy ecological entertainm­ent” (to prove the point, Wolf includes footage of two Biospheria­ns mud wrestling before a crowd, peering through the glass with their home cameras).

“I think one of the fatal flaws of the project is that they called it an experiment, and that comes with the baggage of academic expectatio­ns for science,” Wolf said. Biosphere 2, he believes, was “a different kind of science, a whole-systems or total system approach”.

At the time, the conversati­on around Biosphere 2’s work was “largely dismissive”, said Wolf. “They had been dubbed failures and in most senses their life’s work had been discounted.” The fact that people often associated Biosphere 2 with the 1996 comedy Biodome with Paulie Shore, “is in some senses a tragedy, given the scope and the ambition of this project”. Still, “what’s appealing about Biosphere 2 is the spectacle and theatrical­ity of it,” said Wolf. “This is a futurist project, and that is outside the realm of traditiona­l science. We see it more in the dotcom sector now, in people like Elon Musk and others who are ‘disruptors’ outside of convention­al or mainstream institutio­ns.”

The final third of the film, in which the Biosphere 2 experiment encounters public criticism for its management’s unnecessar­y secrecy, fracturing management relations and financial hemorrhagi­ng, introduces a surprising new leader: a famous figure from the Trump administra­tion who wrings Biosphere’s idealism for profit, in one of several uneasy seedlings of the present. (It goes without saying that a film primarily about eight people trapped, albeit voluntaril­y, in a confined space for months on end has some … parallels to spring 2020). “The takeover of Biosphere 2 is analogous to what you could call the takeover of Biosphere 1,” said Wolf. “We live in a time in which the political powers that be are sabotaging our ability to live sustainabl­y on the planet through insidious policies.”

There’s environmen­tal deregulati­on, the (pre-corona) booming fossil fuel industries, but also the American gospel of profit maximizati­on, which the Synergists could only escape for

so long. The group’s goal to make economical­ly and ecological­ly viable projects was “not economical­ly sustainabl­e”, said Wolf, who sees Biosphere 2 as a “cautionary tale” of “this fantasy of industry and environmen­talism coming together to protect our future”.

Cautionary tale and imperfect experiment it may be, Wolf said he still hopes viewers “feel inspired by a group of people who literally reimagined a world”, and whose personal transforma­tion in isolation “will be useful for viewers today who are now, like the Biospheria­ns, quarantine­d”.

Biosphere 2 demonstrat­es that “the model of small groups coalescing around common goals is viable,” said Wolf, but with a balance: “As we re-enter the world with a certain determinat­ion to take new approaches, there are limitation­s to that idealism because of pervasive forces of capitalism and politics.”

Spaceship Earth is available on Hulu and to rent elsewhere from 8 May in the US with a UK date yet to be announced

 ?? Photograph: Neon ?? A still from Spaceship Earth, which chronicles the Biosphere 2 project.
Photograph: Neon A still from Spaceship Earth, which chronicles the Biosphere 2 project.
 ?? Photograph: Philippe Plailly/Science Photo Library ??
Photograph: Philippe Plailly/Science Photo Library

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