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Thursday, December 19, 2024

With despair and hope, Berlin film fest tackles climate change

True to its nature as a socially conscious film festival, this month’s Berlinale showcases a string of unflinching climate change documentaries raising the alarm about mankind’s destructive behavior while proposing some solutions.

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With despair and hope, Berlin film fest tackles climate change
‘Anthropocene: the Human Epoch’ is a buzzy documentary filmed over three years on six continents.

Among the Berlin festival’s highlights is Anthropocene: the Human Epoch filmed over three years on six continents, with stunning panoramic shots to show the devastating and at times terrifying ways humans have altered their landscape.

“We have reached an unprecedented moment in planetary history. Humans now affect the Earth and its processes more than all other natural forces combined,” said Jennifer Baichwal, the film’s Canadian co-director.

From concrete seawalls built to preserve the Chinese coast to the pockmarked moonscapes created by Germany’s coal mines, rising sea levels in Venice and deforestation in Nigeria, the film shines an unforgiving spotlight on mankind’s footprint on the planet.

In Earth, Austrian filmmaker Nikolaus Geyrhalter focusses on our insatiable appetite for nature’s resources by turning a critical lens on the tools used to alter the world’s geology, like the gargantuan industrial machines deployed to hollow out the earth or move mountains in the interest of mining.

Geyrhalter, who also directed the 2005 food industry documentary Our Daily Bread, singles out the environmental blunder that happened at a former salt mine in Wolfenbuettel, central Germany, which was turned into a site for storing nuclear waste in the 1970s.

After residents were reassured the move was totally safe, it emerged decades later that experts had underestimated the risks of groundwater contamination, prompting years of political and scientific wrangling on how best to decommission the site.

Cutting through the bleakness, the Berlin festival also offered eco documentaries that give a more hopeful view of the future. Australian director Damon Gameau’s 2040, conceived as a visual letter to his four-year-old daughter, explores what the world could look like in the near future if people adopted the best technologies and practices already available to save the planet — and asks children what changes they want to see.

The solutions proposed range from more solar energy and electric cars to greenifying cities, farming at sea and reducing inequality.

To achieve this, “it is going to take a monumental effort from all facets of society,” Gameau told AFP at the festival. 

Calls for increased awareness come as the United Nations confirmed last week that the past four years were the warmest on record, fueled by a rise in emissions of man-made greenhouse gases.

Meanwhile, climate change scepticism persists with leaders like US President Donald Trump and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro doubting mankind’s responsibility for global warming.

But even countries that acknowledge the human impact, like Germany, are struggling to meet targets for reducing carbon dioxide emissions. 

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