Think Forward Climate and Environment Cinema Series

2016 Climate and Environment Cinema is a series of four events jointly organized by the International Center for Climate Change (ICCG) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). They will take place from May to October 2016. Each session will include the screening of movies and short films from the past editions of Think Forward Film Festival, in addition to other movies selected by the ICCG and previously agreed with IFAD.

Tuesday, 17th May 2016, h. 12.30 – 14.10, IFAD, Rome

Topics: environment, climate change, human impacts, good practices

HOME, Yann Arthurs-Bertrand, 93’, documentary, 2009, France

In the past 200,000 years, humans have upset the balance of planet Earth, a balance established by nearly four billion years of evolution. We must act now. It is too late to be a pessimist. The price is too high. Humanity has little time to reverse the trend and change its patterns of consumption.

Through visually stunning footage from over fifty countries, all shot from an aerial perspective, Yann Arthus–Bertrand shows us a view most of us have never seen. He shares with us his sense of awe about our planet and his concern for its health. With this film, Arthus-Bertrand hopes to provide a stepping-stone to further the call to action to take care of our HOME.

Friday, 24th June 2016, h. 12:30 – 14:00, IFAD, Rome

Topics: environment, oceans, climate action

Revolution, Rob Stewart, 85’, documentary, 2013, Canada

Revolution is a film about changing the world. The true-life adventure of Rob Stewart, this follow-up to his acclaimed Sharkwater documentary continues his remarkable journey; one that will take him through 15 countries over four years, and where he’ll discover that it’s not only sharks that are in grave danger.

Friday, 16th September 2016, h. 12:30 – 13:30, IFAD, Rome

Topic: ecosystems

Planet Z, Mokomo Seto, 9’30’’, animation, 2011, France

Somewhere in the Universe, the PLANET Z. A miracle happens. A water jet springs up and gives birth to a new life: plants. A desert planet became a green planet…
Different species cohabit: liquid and sticky mushrooms. But little by little, they invade the green land, and destroy the idyllic life. The toxic spores kill the plants, and transform the planet to a mouldy land… But after destroying all the vegetation, the future of the mould seems to be fearsome. A species cannot live without other ones.


Don’t let it all unravel, Sarah Cox, 2’06’’, animation, 2007, United Kingdom

This planet and everything on it took millions of years to slowly, carefully and uniquely evolve. The speed by which we are now destroying it is the issue that this film tackles through the simple medium of knitting. A colourful knitted globe spins on its axis, a single strand of yarn is being pulled from it. As the camera moves in we see that individual aspects of the planet are unravelling; the polar caps, the seas, and the rain forests all at a great and increasingly unstoppable pace. Endangered animals disappear at an alarming rate. We cut back to see the world smaller and darker, stabbed by a large knitting needle, still unravelling. Don’t Let It all Unravel.


El Rostro Humano del Cambio Climatico, Juan Alvarez, 9’56’’, documentary, 2012, Colombia

*Winner of the Think Forward Film Festival Contest 2012.

A journey through the communities that are trying to adapt to this new planet.


Rain, Henry Boffin, 14’14’’, drama, 2013, Australia

The film is set in a future world in which the earth is water-free. This film tells the story of an elder and a boy which are trying to survive.


Tourism Meltdown, Megumi Nishikura e Luis Patron, 6’40’’, documentary, 2009, Japan

The Sea of Okhotsk has long been the southernmost spot in the Northern Hemisphere where polar sea ice is found. After spreading southward out of the Arctic each winter and along the eastern edge of Sakhalin Island, the ice typically arrives in Hokkaido in mid to late January. The best time to see it is the latter half of February but it stays until late March or early April. However, over the past twenty years the drift ice has been slowly diminishing. Some say this is the result of global warming. The people of Abashiri have come together to take action.

Earthbook, Bernd Hezel, Ephraim Broschkowski, 3’45’’, animation, 2012, Germany

What would Planet Earth post about humans on its profile? The Earth fast forwards through a virtual relationship with humans — but soon starts to ask itself whether it wants to be friends with a species that exploits its national resources.

Friday, 28th October 2016, h. 12:30 – 14:00, IFAD, Rome

Topicenvironmental migrants

Climate Refugees, Michael P. Nash, 85’, documentary, 2010, USA

The project follows the intention to depict the whole range of climate changes and natural hazards which are affecting social and cultural lives in different geographical areas in order to explain the environmental migration process: from the extreme cold of Mongolia to the desertification process in the African continent, passing through river floods, cyclones and see level rise in Bangladesh.

When and Where

Roma, IFAD - IFAD, Roma -

17 May 2016 28 Oct 2016



Contacts

Registration is required. For information and registration: [email protected].

Website Organized by
  • ICCG - International Center for Climate Governance
  • IFAD - International Fund for Agricultural Development

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