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IMDbPro

Wilding

  • 2023
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
420
YOUR RATING
Wilding (2023)
Watch Trailer VOSE
Play trailer1:53
1 Video
3 Photos
Documentary

A dying landscape that is healed against all odds, going on to thrive in astonishing ways.A dying landscape that is healed against all odds, going on to thrive in astonishing ways.A dying landscape that is healed against all odds, going on to thrive in astonishing ways.

  • Director
    • David Allen
  • Writer
    • Isabella Tree
  • Stars
    • Matthew Collyer
    • Rhiannon Neads
    • Isabella Tree
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    420
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Allen
    • Writer
      • Isabella Tree
    • Stars
      • Matthew Collyer
      • Rhiannon Neads
      • Isabella Tree
    • 8User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer VOSE
    Trailer 1:53
    Trailer VOSE

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast4

    Edit
    Matthew Collyer
    • Self
    Rhiannon Neads
    • Isabella Tree
    Isabella Tree
    • Self
    Jon Wennington
    • Ted Green
    • Director
      • David Allen
    • Writer
      • Isabella Tree
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    7.3420
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    Featured reviews

    8caroleanne-57166

    Inspired to find out more

    This film is beyond beautiful and I found it far more moving than I could ever have imagined. Seeing nature developing like that - especially the animals growing into their natural selves - was just gorgeous.

    I watched the film with a people from both our local Environmental group and Climate Action group and we were all deeply moved by the way animals help nature to heal itself. At the end we had questions around how the estate supports itself - camping there isn't expensive and nor are the wildlife tours they do, so hardly enough to support such a huge estate and country house (complete with battlements!)

    I felt that it could have gone into so much more depth around how healing the land benefits farming, how they manage the land and the animals, how they make enough money to support the estate. They talk briefly about the need for it to support itself but never any more than that.

    And they talk about how challenging it was to tread a path that caused so much strong reaction and hint at the end that this is changing or has changed, but don't develop that theme either.

    So I really, really loved the film and would have given it 10 out of 10 for sheer beauty and inspiration, but felt that it could have developed quite a few of the themes to make it more informative rather than just inspirational.
    6CinemaSerf

    Wilding

    There's something quite fascinating about the recuperative ability of the land to recover from centuries of man's abuse displayed in this documentary. Isabella Tree and husband Charlie have inherited a country estate that can barely manage to grow weeds. The soil is knackered and desperate action is required. They hit on the fairly radical idea of abandoning the place to nature (except their front lawn!) and the film now follows the reclamation of this space by birds, bugs, deer, pigs, cattle - creatures that would have roamed the land freely a few hundred years ago. They even bring in storks! It's a stunning piece of photography to look at, but the underlying narrative is really quite weak and I found it allowed sentiment to overrule the one thing it fails to address - scalability. They live in a castle with no evident money worries. None that we are told about, anyway. So this looks like a worthy pet project that though laudable and impressive will, as one of their neighbours raises at a meeting, not feed the nation. When the vast majority of these complementary farming techniques were in use, the population of the UK was probably less than 10% of what it is now; malnutrition and starvation were rife and distribution methods, without refrigeration, left the food supply subject to the vagaries of the weather. What this doesn't address in any way is just how this method of nurturing the land is going to provide for an hungry population. It's largely presented by Isabella Tree herself, and she is an engaging individual but one who presents the most complex of arguments in far too simple a fashion - as if it were a lecture on the relative merits of organic methods without addressing in any way their limitations of their practicalities or economics. "Duncan" the horse and a few of the pigs have some great fun at a charity polo match and it is a very watchable film - but a little too light and fluffy.
    5euroGary

    Heart-warming, but in a one-sided way

    I attended the world premiere of this documentary in a small but packed cinema during the 2023 London Film Festival. It tells of the efforts of Charlie Burrell and Isabella Tree to 'rewild' the former's family farm after many years of intensive agriculture have left the land exhausted.

    Townie lovers of nature will find much to enjoy here: not only the amusing antics of horses and pigs (the re-enacted escapade of the porkers in a refreshment marquee could have been written by James Herriot); but insects, flowers and tree roots are all amply featured. The camera work is spectacular (what ever did we do before drones?), even if some of the sequences are obviously staged (eg, a harvest mouse running through a drain pipe) or use CGI.

    But it is what is left out that makes this less a documentary than an unquestioning filmed hymn to Burrell and Tree. Basic information is not given: for instance, how extensive is the rewilding experiment - does it cover all of the farm, or just a small part of it? (And if all the farm is involved, how profitable is it?) Also, in her narration Tree makes a quick reference to the farm's animals being 'managed' - but 'managed' how? In many institutions involving animals, 'managing' them is done with a gun - if that is the case here, why not say so and explain why it is necessary? And what is the purpose to the farm of the camera-friendly animals we see - are they merely decoration, pets, or are they eventually sent for slaughter?

    Also missing is hardly any expression of differing points of view - essential for creating a balanced piece of non-fiction work. A brief sequence of neighbouring farmers having doubts about the Burrell/Tree experiment sees them dismissed as old-fashioned meanies; their concerns about ragwort - apparently an extremely damaging plant which Burrell and Tree have growing in abundance - are never addressed. And if all the UK were turned over to rewilding, how would that affect our ability to feed a population fast heading toward 70million?

    So, for all the spectacular camera work, this is pretty much a propaganda piece only. The missed opportunity to counter alternative points of view - leaving the viewer with the impression Burrell, Tree and the film-makers do not have the courage of their convictions, which I admit may be doing them a dis-service - weakens their own argument.
    9jihadsaade

    What lies beneath listening to nature

    I think the film invites to dream about a different reality.

    It doesn't provide the viewers with a complete study on how to shift from commercial farming to permaculture, but, what it gives us is a glimpse of the possibilities that lie beneath this practice and the unlimited wisdom that the earth carry with it.

    The visuals are beyond beautiful, the directing work, the sound design and music are meticulously crafted .

    I'm very happy that I got to discover this film in Phoenix Cinema in Leicester and it feels like there is a movement of collective consciousness happening right now that bring back the long lost harmony to our current broken system.
    2grm-39453

    Nonsense

    I was disappointed, I expected organic farming. I got some rich couple who sell expensive tours of a estate with some animals running about on it.

    Not wild boar, of course not, might be a wee bit dangerous?

    Not wild cattle, but a breed. And regular horses.

    This is how the world was they claim. Well, explain New Zealand then. Or the Pacific Islands.

    They also forget most of the people way back when, were not well fed. Animals and plants went extinct even then, they suffered from disease, hunger, climate change, disasters.

    Right... Watch bats eat for 70 pounds. Look at butterflies for another 70.

    "visit wildlife refugia" it actually says in yep a 4WD vehicle for 110 pounds.

    What a joke.

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    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 14, 2024 (Ireland)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wilding, el regreso de la naturaleza
    • Production companies
      • Passion Pictures
      • HHMI Tangled Bank Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,210,408
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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