Green Film Festival of San Francisco 2025

Green Shorts Program 1

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7 films in package
Black Tide
On July 25, 2020, the bulk carrier MV Wakashio ran aground on the reef on the east coast of Mauritius. 12 days later, oil began to spill, causing the worst ecological disaster ever to occur in the region.
The Congress
Indonesian activist, Rukka Sombolinggi believes the key to confronting the climate crisis is to unite and mobilize the Indigenous communities who are often impacted the most. Now, as the first female general secretary of the world’s largest Indigenous Peoples organization, she has the power to do just that. But the challenge is monumental. One October thousands traveled from across the island nation of Indonesia to attend one of the largest gatherings of Indigenous Peoples in the world. Whether arriving by open-air trucks, boat or even by foot the AMAN congress, led by Rukka, drew thousands of people across the Indonesian archipelago and its 17,000 islands. Using a process of “deliberative democracy” the Congress prioritizes finding solutions through consensus so that no groups are left out. This unique process resulted in 32 resolutions, uniting the voices of over 20,000 indigenous communities to address land rights, economic dealings, environmental issues, and the criminalization of Indigenous Peoples across the archipelago. This is a story about the democratic process, defiance and dignity in the face of climate catastrophe.
Terminus
This is a memorial for an ancient glacier that will fade out of existence in this generation. Emerson and Cedar, a five and three year-old pair of brothers who live on a sailboat, share what they have learned about this vanishing glacier in Olympic National Park. This short film is ancillary to the main effort, which is to ensure the glacier lives on in the heart of the next generation while fostering a deep connection to nature.
Lands End
Swimmers gather, plunge through the surf, and head west from China Beach where San Francisco’s Northern edge meets the Pacific Ocean. Taking a break from their busy lives, they swim along the base of Lands End’s sheer rock cliffs, navigating wave-battered rocks covered with kelp, mussels, and harbor seals basking in the chilly gray fog. Swimmers here are often subject to the Pacific Ocean's violent mood swings. Visitors swim through calm waters, but also fight strong currents, big surf, and the threat of hypothermia at times. They prepare physically and psychologically before subjecting themselves to powerful ocean forces, yet these explorers find something healing in the untamed waters!
Intangible Zone
In the Colombian Amazon, the Curare indigenous reservation survives and struggles to protect the Intangible Zone, a territory inhabited by isolated tribes in a natural, millenary state, extremely vulnerable to outside contact.
What The River Knows
A lost eden drowned under Lake Powell re-emerges, revealing the follies of the past and a new way forward for the Colorado River. What The River Knows is an advocacy short-doc that explores this unique inflection point in a centuries-long history: at the same time that we are met with the need to redesign our systems of water management in the west, we are presented with the opportunity to restore one of the most stunning landscapes on the planet.
Green Shorts Program 1 Q&A
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