Learning to See
In the early nineties, Robert Oelman makes a radical move: he leaves his psychology career to pursue photography and moves from the United States to Colombia, purchasing a small farm […]
In the early nineties, Robert Oelman makes a radical move: he leaves his psychology career to pursue photography and moves from the United States to Colombia, purchasing a small farm […]
When a zebra’s stripes start changing their patterns in unexpected ways, he learns that being unique is something to celebrate. Directed and produced by Julia Ocker.
On the rock of Gibraltar, the municipal government hires workers to keep macaques from running rampant – but these monkeys have lived there far longer than the Brits have, and […]
Winner, Best Science and Nature Program, Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival! Antarctic krill may be tiny, but they’re massively important: a whole ecosystem depends on these little crustaceans, with whales, […]
Every night, all over Europe and North America, populations of Common Starling gather at dusk to perform a stunning air show in vast, amorphous flocks called “murmurations,’ majestically captured by […]
Finalist, Best People and Nature Program, Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival At the Gir Forest Sanctuary in Gujarat, the last remaining population of Asiatic Lions – a species that once covered much of […]
A woodpecker and a colony of leafcutter ants get on each others nerves until they’re faced with a common enemy: a lumberjack trying to cut down their tree. Directed […]
A little hedgehog finds a magnificent apple in the woods, but other forest animals have their eye on it as well. Directed by Marjorie Caup.
An elephant working as a street cleaner takes up bicycling, vividly animated by Olesya Shchukina using real paper cutouts. Directed by Olesya Shchukina.
When biologist E.O. Wilson discovered in the 1960s that ants use pheromones to structure their complex societies, he opened the door to a vastly expanded sense of our environment – […]