2021 | A/BG | Experimental

We The Nature

  • english 27 mins
  • Director | borjana ventzislavova
  • Writer | ovid pop, borjana ventzislavova
  • Producer | borjana ventzislavova

STATUS: Released

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We The Nature is a visual plea about the human-nature relationship in which the nature receives an androgynous voice and by acting calmly and emphatically communicates its message on the current climate crisis and addresses the audience directly by insisting on their fundamental rights. At a moment when global warming is not a science fiction and most people feel the effects of climate change in their own lives the nature is calling on us people to change the way we treat the environment and its resources once and for all before it's too late. The appeal to prevent catastrophic global warming is accompanied by impressive landscapes, collected for over 10 years worldwide, showing the beauty and helplessness of iconic, forgotten or unknown places all over USA, Canada, Bulgaria, Greece, Thailand, the Canary Islands, and others.

 

Concept, Camera, Editing, Production: Borjana Ventzislavova

Text and Adaption: Ovid Pop, Borjana Ventzislavova
Sound Design: Sebastian Meyer

Voiceover: Anat Stainberg

2nd Camer: Maximilian Pramatarov, Iv Penev-Ventzislavov, Erin Turney
Editing: Borjana Ventzislavova

Post-Production, Visual Effects: Mladen Penev, Borjana Ventzislavova

English Text Editing: Graham Parkes
German Translation: Ovid Pop, Lisa Ortner-Kreil

Text Quotes and Inspiration: Elias Canetti (The Human Province), David Lynch, Mark Frost (Twin Peaks, Season 1), Universal Declaration Of The Rights Of Mother Earth, Bolivia Grants Nature Historic Bill Of Rights, Silvia Federici (Feminism And Ecological Struggles), Noam Chomsky and Robert Pollin (The Climate Crisis And The Global Green New Deal), Graham Parkes (How To Think About The Climate Crisis – A Philosophical Guide To Saner Ways Of Living), Russell Means (Revolution And American Indians: “Marxism Is As Alien To My Culture As Capitalism”), Thich Nhat Hanh


Supported by: 
BMKOES and Bank Austria Kunstforum

 

climate crisis human-nature relationship nature