Yesterday, I attended most of the Environmental Film Festival. The first film, Garbage, was introduced by Canadian filmmaker, Andrew Nisker. The premise behind the film is to document one family’s experiment with garbage. This 5-person (2 adults, 3 children) family saves their garbage and recycling for 3 months to observe how much they were generating. On the way, questions are asked and issues of recycling, composting, and toxic household materials are explored. The film was informative, funny, and entertaining. The one critique I have is that at the end, someone comes to pick up their garbage, and the couple is so happy to see it go “away,” except of course it did have a destination - a lot of it ends up at the landfill. I question whether or not the experiment moved the family to change their behavioral practices, i.e. generate less garbage. The wife does mention that she is definitely more aware, but I’m left wondering how far she will take that awareness.

Edward Burtynsky, Dam #6, Three Gorges Dam Project, Yangtze River, 2005
The 2nd film I watched was Manufactured Landscapes, a documentary about the photographic works of Edward Burtynsky. The artist produces absolutely stunning images of the landscapes forever altered by humanity through resource extraction, building, and manufacturing. His work declines to politicize the subject matter, yet I could not walk away from it with any sense that we have done good work on this planet. I was particularly interested in his images of China; he explores Three Gorges Dam, a manufacturing facility as big as anything I’ve ever seen, and the urbanization of Shanghai. Although his images are at times stark and at other times quite dark, they are all compelling.
Web Links:
Garbage
Edward Burtynsky