Behold the Earth is a feature-length musical documentary that inquires into America's divorce from nature, built out of conversations with leading biologists and evangelical Christians, and directed by David Conover. Filmmakers' blog is below.
A rich opportunity…the Ark story, retold, thousands of years old, revisited as a base of dialogue among scientists and people of faith.
All of life sampled in one ship. One ship, with no apparent means of moving about. No sails. No engine. Only its own surface area, being pushed around by wind and water. All of life aboard, including humanity. Each trying to protect itself, carve out a niche. Some stronger than others. Some louder. Some more persistent. Others more patient. Some visible. Most not.
We focus on this ship. Why was it built? What runs it? Where has it come from? Where is it going? Can a steady course be steered long enough to avoid the common shoals ahead? Or is it there that we will rest, while the water recedes, life jumps ship, and we wait for the seas to rise again?
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This morning I found myself thinking about the root causes for
why people find it so difficult to address the degradation of the planet. A frequent thought. I remembered my trip to Copenhagen last December, during the UN Climate Change Talks. We were producing a focus piece on the OCEANS and CLIMATE CHANGE.
People had come from all corners of the earth to see what could be done in the face of a climate changed by us. Many looked to the leaders of two countries, China and America, for big strides. Instead, these countries shuffled. These leaders shuffled because their people are shuffling. Why are Americans shuffling?

Wandering through one of the peaceful protests on Copenhagen’s, I smiled to see a model of earth held in the arms of youthful spirits.
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I will be screening clips and speaking about this work-in-progress BEHOLD THE EARTH on Sunday at 2:45pm, at the Baird Auditorium of the Smithsonian’s Museum of Natural History. Please come if you are in the Washington area this weekend and curious to learn what the production is all about.
The talk and screening is part of the US Environmental Film Festival, in its 18th year. For those of you who are enthusiasts for films about the people/nature connection, there are 155 diverse films screening between March 16th and 28th. Special programs exist for children and are marked by a family-friendly symbol in the festival program.
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