All Uses: $25 includes Public Performance Rights and Streaming Rights PAL and NTSC DVDs available
Updates for GREEN March 2012 broadcast on Al Jazeera. Read interview with Patrick Rouxel here Article in The Daily Mail UK March 22, 2012. Read here
Use the guide below called STUDYING GREEN which contains a series of short essays written by a variety of University lecturers in response to the film GREEN. They attended the 2010 WildScreen Film Festival where GREEN won its coveted Golden Panda award and where the film’s creator, Patrick Rouxel, presented and talked about the film.
GREEN has now won top awards from the two most prestigious wildlife film festivals in the world...and more than 30 others.
Golden Panda Award - Wildscreen 2010 Grand Teton Award - Jackson Hole International Wildlife Film Festival 2009
See what the buzz is about, watch below now.
Her name is GREEN, she is alone in a world that doesn’t belong to her. She is a female orangutan, victim of deforestation and resource exploitation. This film is an emotional journey with GREEN’s final days. With no narration, it is a visual ride presenting the devastating impacts of logging and land clearing for palm oil plantations, the choking haze created by rainforest fires and the tragic end of rainforest biodiversity. We watch the effects of consumerism and are faced with our personal accountability in the loss of the world’s rainforest treasures.
CREDITS: Produced, Directed, Filmed and Edited by: Patrick Rouxel 48 minutes No narration 16:9 PAL and NTSC DVDs available for your screenings
BIO: Born in 1966, Patrick Rouxel is half Swedesh, half French. He grew up in Malaysia and Singapore, speaks French, English and a bit of Indonesian. After working for more then 10 years in digital special effects for feature films, he changed tracks to freelance as a filmmaker for environmental conservation in 2003. For the last few years, Patrick has worked as a cameraman or film director for NGOs like Global Witness, Greenpeace and WWF in Indonesia and Africa. He also produces his own films dedicated to the protection of the tropical rainforests. GREEN is one of a trilogy: documenting through creative storrytelling rainforest destruction in Indonesia, Brazil and the Congo.
ALMA is second in the tropical rainforest destruction trilogy. Set in Brazil.
AWARDS: 35 international awards, including: Wildscreen 2010 -- Golden Panda Award.
Jackson Hole International Wildlife Film Festival 2009 -- USA Best of Festival: Grand Teton Award Best Conservation Film
Durango Film Festival 2009 -- USA Best short documentary Best audience buzz
International Wildlife Film Festival 2009 - USA Sapphire award, second place of Festival Best Sound design Best Editing Best Conservation and Environmental Issue
Festival Albert 2009 - France Grand Prix Meilleur scenario
Festival International du Film Nature et Environnement 2009 (FRAPNA) - FRANCE Hérisson de Bronze
Bourges International Ecological Film Festival, 2009 (France) Meilleure fiction et prix Ushuaïa TV
REVIEW: by The Australian Orangutan Project The film "Green", is a 48 min long documentary on the Indonesian rainforest, deforestation and orangutan extinction. It is a silent film (without narration, but with music) which addresses itself both to the Indonesians and the consumers of wood/paper/palm oil around the world.
This important documentary was filmed in the fast disappearing Indonesian rainforest and is not narrated, however, its message is clear and frightening. The home of the Orangutan and many other wildlife species in Indonesia is being decimated at an alarming rate by consumer need and greed.
The film features the widespread practice of ‘slash and burn’ to clear the lush rainforest to make way for extensive palm oil plantations which we, the consumer, support in our demand for our favourite foods, magazines, cosmetics, and, increasingly, biofuel. The practice has also seen Indonesia move into third place behind the US and China with regard to carbon emissions due to the uncovering of peat soil which has lain, undisturbed, below the tropical rainforest for centuries. The film exposes the illegal pet trade that thrives in Indonesia and the sick, despairing lives of those Orangutan who spend years, often all their lives, locked in small cages, suffering, alone.
The story thread follows the fate of a female Orangutan who has been captured and brought in because her forest home has been decimated. She is one of the lucky ones – most are slaughtered without mercy when caught. Her fate though, is not a happy one, as her trauma at the hands of man is too great. Your heart will break with resounding pity, but it is even more sobering to know that she is only one of hundreds every week who will suffer a similar fate.
Make sure everyone you know watches this documentary. We owe it to our friends, the gentle Orangutan, we owe it to our planet, and we owe it to ourselves so that we can learn from it.
Current Reviews: 2
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