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- A trapper and his wife brave the harsh Yukon climate, trecherous landscape and dangerous wildlife in an attempt to live a life of solitude.
- In 1992, Severn Cullis-Suzuki, then only 12 years old, addressed the world at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development. Eighteen years have passed, but little visible progress has been made toward positive change on Earth. Severn spoke again, explaining that despite the ongoing environmental crisis, it is still possible to reverse the trend and move towards respecting biodiversity.
- A chronicle of man-made environmental abuse from 1967 to the present day, set to music and clips of from each year in turn.
- Too often while living our daily lives we distance ourselves from the environment. This short film follows the journey one man takes every day on his way to work. The pressures of the concrete jungle have disconnected him from life and nature, and in a desperate attempt to reconnect he finds a small paradise in the most unlikely place. Beauty in nature is all around us. You just need to know where to look.
- In 2095 the world is a different place. The remaining trees are dying, there are no animals. We have one chance to make a difference to the world he will be born into - Joshua Tree.
- A film about the slaughter of elephants, filmed in Kenya's Tsavo National Park, highlights that nearly 2.5 tons of ivory were imported into India between 1975 and 1976. The footage shows elephants slowly and painfully dying from the poison of tainted arrows, used by landowners who amuse themselves with tusk collecting. The film, sponsored by WWF India and the East African Wild Life Society and produced by Beauty Without Cruelty, aims to dissuade people from purchasing ivory products.
- Gorillas are observed in the rainforests of the Central African Republic, where ecotourism may be thwarted by the primates' hostile behavior towards tourists despite efforts to acclimate them to humans.