Tag: conservation
World Oceans Day, A Celebration Of Our Oceans
Happy World Ocean's Day! In observance of this important day, we here at Wild Lens will hold a Facebook Live Q&A led by our Souls of the Vermilion Sea filmmakers Sean Bogle and Matthew Podolsky at 6:30pm PT/9:30pm EST and we also ...
Last of the Longnecks: A Film Review
Last of the Longnecks A Film Review by Sarah Chinn Photos by Derek E. Lee, Wild Nature Institute In 2016 filmmaker Ashley Scott Davidson of the boutique film production company Iniosante Inc. released a feature motion picture about giraffes. Great, everyone ...
Extinction Reversed, But At What Cost?
Imagine a living mammoth, flesh and bone, once again lumbering across the plains, rejoining life on earth in the 21st century. Despite having gone extinct thousands of years ago, some scientists of our time are seriously considering the possibility of resurrecting this ...
The Ivory Game: A Film Review
A review by Brandon Navratil The Ivory Game is a full-length documentary produced by Red Bull’s Terra Mater Film Studios and Microsoft co-founder Paul G. Allen’s Vulcan Productions, in association with Malaika Pictures and Appian Way. As a Netflix original ...
Endangered Species Day, Every Day
Rather than saying "Happy Endangered Species Day" to you, I want to emphasize what kind of message this annual day of observance really intends to convey: Earth's species are at risk of extinction and, unless we garner awareness, educate ourselves ...
Project Puffin: A Story Review
The book is Project Puffin: The Improbable Quest to Bring a Beloved Seabird Back to Egg Rock by Stephen W. Kress and Derrick Z. Jackson As a "Puffineer" of three seasons working on puffin nesting islands, this is a book that ...
Gray Area: Wolves of the Southwest, a review
Written by Brandon Navratil In Executive Producer Alan Lacy’s first film, “Gray Area: Wolves of the Southwest” explores the plight of a species the world almost lost forever. Along with Director Dean Cannon and TLP Media, the 50-minute feature tells ...
Take it to the streets: March for Science
The March for Science is coming. And it is bigger than we think. It will take place not just in Washington DC, not just all across the nation, but around the entire planet, in more than 500 satellite marches effectively showing the world's ...
Coral Bleaching: Death of a Once-Rich Reef
As sea temperatures rise with the ever-growing impact of climate change, we are left to witness the deadly ripple effects expand across one of the most richly biodiverse areas on earth and one of the seven greatest natural wonders of the world, the ...