WILD EARTH OCEANIA FILM FESTIVAL 2024
Travel Through the Eyes of Nature
With this session, we are taking you on a world tour that you won’t want to miss! Get ready to watch some fantastic natural history tales from four different countries.
HaMidbar
Directed & Produced by Kirsten Slemint
Student & Youth – 11 minutes
Often regarded as empty and desolate, the Israeli deserts are anything but. These deserts have shaped some of the toughest creatures on the planet with some incredibly stories of survival. For her debut film the Director took a profound journey into the Israeli deserts to bring us HaMidbar – ‘the wilderness’.
SESSION TIME
Date: 17th of January, 2024
Time: 12:45pm – 2:25pm (includes 60 minutes Q&A)
Address: Mercury Cinema, 13 Morphett Street, Adelaide
This film session contains content that may not be appropriate for very young viewers. 8+ years recommended.
Kingdom of Ice: Antarctica’s Leopard Seals
Directed by Paul Nicklen & Andy Mann and Produced by Paul Nicklen
Sponsored Film – 9 minutes
Diving in the icy kingdom of Antarctica soon brings you face-to-face with one of the continent’s most highly regarded predators of the sea, the powerful leopard seal. And yet, when our co-founders Paul Nicklen and Cristina Mittermeier share a remarkable encounter with one special seal, the experience reveals a charismatic and nurturing side to these animals rarely shared with the rest of the world.
“Being in the water with a leopard seal is one of the most beautiful things you can ever experience in life. They’re very, very curious. And their curiosity, I think it’s what’s special,” Paul Nicklen. The leopard seal patrols the frigid realm with ease, grace, and endless wonder toward any life that enters its home. However, the future of its domain remains in peril. Covering nearly 20% of Earth’s southern hemisphere, Antarctica regulates the global climate, slowing down warming temperatures and capturing carbon dioxide from the surrounding air. The continent also creates a nutrient-rich environment for phytoplankton, the very foundation of the world’s food web, to grow and thrive. Today, Antarctica is vulnerable to melting ice shelves, losing land mass to rising sea levels, rampant overfishing, and increasing algae blooms that greatly limit the growth of vital plankton. But there is still hope to save its ecosystem.
WILD EARTH OCEANIA FILM FESTIVAL 2024
Travel Through the Eyes of Nature
With this session, we are taking you on a world tour that you won’t want to miss! Get ready to watch some fantastic natural history tales from four different countries.
SESSION TIME
Date: 17th of January, 2024
Time: 12:45pm – 2:25pm (includes 60 minutes Q&A)
Address: Mercury Cinema, 13 Morphett Street, Adelaide
This film session contains content that may not be appropriate for very young viewers. 8+ years recommended.
HaMidbar
Directed & Produced by Kirsten Slemint
Student & Youth – 11 minutes
Often regarded as empty and desolate, the Israeli deserts are anything but. These deserts have shaped some of the toughest creatures on the planet with some incredibly stories of survival. For her debut film the Director took a profound journey into the Israeli deserts to bring us HaMidbar – ‘the wilderness’.
Kingdom of Ice: Antarctica’s Leopard Seals
Directed by Paul Nicklen & Andy Mann and Produced by Paul Nicklen
Sponsored Film – 9 minutes
Diving in the icy kingdom of Antarctica soon brings you face-to-face with one of the continent’s most highly regarded predators of the sea, the powerful leopard seal. And yet, when our co-founders Paul Nicklen and Cristina Mittermeier share a remarkable encounter with one special seal, the experience reveals a charismatic and nurturing side to these animals rarely shared with the rest of the world.
“Being in the water with a leopard seal is one of the most beautiful things you can ever experience in life. They’re very, very curious. And their curiosity, I think it’s what’s special,” Paul Nicklen. The leopard seal patrols the frigid realm with ease, grace, and endless wonder toward any life that enters its home. However, the future of its domain remains in peril. Covering nearly 20% of Earth’s southern hemisphere, Antarctica regulates the global climate, slowing down warming temperatures and capturing carbon dioxide from the surrounding air. The continent also creates a nutrient-rich environment for phytoplankton, the very foundation of the world’s food web, to grow and thrive. Today, Antarctica is vulnerable to melting ice shelves, losing land mass to rising sea levels, rampant overfishing, and increasing algae blooms that greatly limit the growth of vital plankton. But there is still hope to save its ecosystem.
Creatures of the Kaleidoscope
Directed & Produced by Hannah Jodie Alexander
Students & Youth – 18 minutes
Exploring one of nature’s most magical creatures, the cuttlefish. Discover how they use their colour changing and shape shifting abilities to survive and thrive in the open ocean.
Eye of the Hornbill
Directed by Miguel Anton
Micro Short – 5 minutes
A portrait of the colourful birdlife of the Tenasserim mountains of South-East Asia. The forest appears quiet, but deep inside, daily adventures take place under the attentive eye of the hornbill. Today, a monsoon downpour soaks the jungle, and the radiant Black-naped monarch will have to be persistent if he wants to maintain his bright plumage. Secret stories of rarely-filmed birds that will keep unfolding as long as their forest home remains untouched.