Acompanha James Balog, fotógrafo da National Geographic, pelo Ártico enquanto ele instala câmeras de lapso de tempo projetadas com um propósito: capturar um registro de longo prazo das mudan... Ler tudoAcompanha James Balog, fotógrafo da National Geographic, pelo Ártico enquanto ele instala câmeras de lapso de tempo projetadas com um propósito: capturar um registro de longo prazo das mudanças nas geleiras do mundo.Acompanha James Balog, fotógrafo da National Geographic, pelo Ártico enquanto ele instala câmeras de lapso de tempo projetadas com um propósito: capturar um registro de longo prazo das mudanças nas geleiras do mundo.
- Indicado a 1 Oscar
- 9 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
- Self - National Geographic Explorer
- (as Sylvia Earle Ph.D.)
- Self - EIS Engineer
- (as Adam Lewinter)
- Self - Climatologist, Ohio State University
- (as Jason Box Ph.D.)
- Self - Glaciologist, University of Colorado
- (as Tad Pfeffer Ph.D.)
- Self - EIS Videographer
- (as Jeff Orlowski)
- Self - Oceanographer, National Center for Atmospheric Research
- (as Synte Peacock Ph.D.)
- Self - Senior Fellow, Stanford University Woods Institute
- (as Terry Root Ph.D.)
- Self - Directof of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona
- (as Thomas Swetnam Ph.D.)
- Self - Head of Geo Risks Research, Munich Reinsurance
- (as Peter Hoeppe Ph.D.)
- Self - Senior Scientist, National Center for Atmospheric Research
- (as Gerald Meehl Ph.D.)
Avaliações em destaque
Instead they spend way too much telling their own story. They delve into the technical difficulties of mounting cameras to photograph distant glaciers over a period of years, the complexities of hiking to these locations, the personal danger and discomfort they had to endure, and most peculiarly the physical problems that lead photographer James Balog experienced with his knee problems and surgeries. All these personal stories are interesting to a point, but distract from scientific case that they need to make. This should be a scientific and environmental story not a personal narrative. The powerful case that the beautiful photography makes is undermined, by poorly conceived film narrative. The average viewer needs a lot better understanding of what the melting of the glaciers means and what sort of affect this will have on their daily life in the near future. A better narrative device might have been to show the melting ice of the glaciers and then film the rising sea level in other parts of the world. Some reports have suggested that the Maldives Islands might soon be underwater. Showing where the water from the melting glaciers is ending up could have proved to be a much more powerful narrative device. I wish they had done a better job at telling an important scientific story with deep political and moral significance for the planet.
During the Q&A after the film, Balog argued that this isn't a political problem, that it is a universal problem. It may be a universal problem, but its solution requires collective political action that is based on science not emotion. They are naive if they are unwilling to engage the powerful political debate that is preventing progress on this issue.
The footage is magnificent and the film is scored very well. James Balog's personal challenges in undertaking the project are also documented, and present an interesting angle to this style of documentary.
By presenting the footage in as non-partisan manner as possible, Chasing Ice avoids tarnishing its message with politics.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesHolds the record for containing the biggest and longest lasting glacier calving that has ever been put to film. On May 28th, 2008, the Jakobshawn Glacier in Greenland had a calving event that lasted 75 straight minutes. It resulted in 7.4 Cubic KB of ice crashing into the ocean.
- Citações
James Balog - Photographer: If you had an abscess in your tooth, would you keep going to dentist after dentist until you found a dentist who said, "Ah, don't worry about it. Leave that rotten tooth in"? Or would you pull it out because more of the other dentists told you you had a problem? That's sort of what we're doing with climate change.
- ConexõesFeatured in Moyers & Company: Justice, Not Politics (2012)
- Trilhas sonorasBefore My Time
Music and Lyrics by J. Ralph
Produced, Arranged, Engineered and Mixed by J. Ralph
Co-produced and Engineered by Arthur Pingrey
Protools by Arthur Pingrey
Performed by Scarlett Johansson and Joshua Bell
Piano by Jay Israelson
Mastered by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering
Legal by Alan Kress
Recorded at The Theater, New York City, January 2012 and March 2012
Special Thanks to Danny Bensi, Camilla Olson, Heidi Frederick and Alan Kress
Joshua Bell appears courtesy of Sony Classical
Principais escolhas
- How long is Chasing Ice?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.328.467
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 1.358.668
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 15 min(75 min)
- Cor