ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH

Showings

Ped Mall -The Screening Room Fri, Oct 11, 2019 6:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sat, Oct 12, 2019 1:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sat, Oct 12, 2019 6:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sun, Oct 13, 2019 3:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Mon, Oct 14, 2019 6:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Tue, Oct 15, 2019 6:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Wed, Oct 16, 2019 6:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Thu, Oct 17, 2019 6:30 PM
Series Info
Series:New Release Films
Film Info
Director:Jennifer Baichwal, Nicholas de Pencier, Edward Burtynsky
Year Released:2019
Production Country:Canada
Language:English
Russian
Italian
German
Mandarin
Cantonese

Description

"Astonishment. Pure, lurid, ravishing, genuine astonishment." - Nonfics

"Seeks to reveal rather than lecture, in the hopes that our eyes will convince our brains to act before it's too late." - Toronto Star

OFFICIAL SELECTION: Toronto International Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, Berlin Film Festival

A stunning sensory experience and cinematic meditation on humanity's massive re-engineering of the planet, Anthropocene: The Human Epoch is a years-in-the-making documentary from the award-winning team behind Manufactured Landscapes (2006) and Watermark (2013) and narrated by Alicia Vikander. The film follows the research of an international body of scientists, the Anthropocene Working Group, who after nearly 10 years of research, argue that the Holocene Epoch gave away to the Anthropocene Epoch in the mid-twentieth century as a result of profound and lasting human changes to the Earth.

From concrete seawalls in China that now cover 60% of the mainland coast, to the biggest terrestrial machines ever built in Germany, to psychedelic potash mines in Russia's Ural Mountains, to metal festivals in the closed city of Norilsk, to the devastated Great Barrier Reef in Australia and massive marble quarries in Carrara, the filmmakers have traversed the globe using state of the art camera techniques to document the evidence and experience of human planetary domination. At the intersection of art and science, Anthropocene: The Human Epoch witnesses a critical moment in geological history - bringing a provocative and unforgettable experience of our species's breadth and impact.