Timothy Treadwell a passé treize étés, sans armes, près des grizzlys dans le Katmai National Park and Preserve en Alaska. Lors des cinq dernières expéditions il a filmé les ours et s'est mis en scène à leurs côtés ; il a réalisé des films de sensibilisation servant à illustrer ses interventions et sur la nécessité de protéger les ours sauvages. En 2003, à la fin de la treizième expédition, Timothy Treadwell et sa compagne, Amie Huguenard, ont été attaqués et dévorés par un grizzly.
The film involves an undercover investigation by LCA's special investigations unit of Martin Creek Kennel in Williford, Arkansas, an alleged "Class B" dealer. A member of the unit obtains a job at the kennel and documents deplorable conditions: dead dogs, dying dogs, starving dogs, dogs covered with wounds, dogs with missing ears. Partially as a result of the documentation, the kennel was permanently shut down by federal authorities.
Interviewing leaders of animal organizations and volunteers who went to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, it is revealed that at the beginning, everyone had different ideas about how things should be done, but no one was willing to take charge because the problem was bigger than anyone could have imagined. The film champions the volunteers whose only concern was saving animals, unlike the animal organizations who were more concerned with the chain of command.
Le film aborde la question de « l'urgence des déchets » et de la pollution en Campanie, se focalisant sur les problèmes des décharges illégales, de l'écomafia et des conséquences de la pollution sur l'élevage, en particulier des moutons, et sur l'agriculture. Il fournit enfin des indices sur le chiffre d'affaires généré dans l'élimination illégales des déchets.
Un voyage sans précédent à travers le temps pour découvrir l'histoire incroyable des plus grands dinosaures du monde, de leur apparition à leur extinction, et des découvertes paléontologiques les plus impressionnantes. Créées en collaboration avec les meilleurs scientifiques, des images de synthèse à couper le souffle donnent vie aux animaux les plus extraordinaires : Tyrannosaurus Rex, Giganotosaurus, Argentinosaurus et bien d'autres...
Un regard candide et introspectif sur les croyances et les motivations d'Ingrid Newkirk, la cofondatrice d'origine britannique et force motrice de People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), la plus grande organisation de défense des droits des animaux au monde.
The film opens with footage of a NASA rocket launch, an animation of our solar system, and a quote from Deuteronomy 30:19 about choosing between life and death (illustrated with images of the planet Earth as seen from space, contrasted with an exploding atom bomb). This is followed by a statement that humanity has not been caring for the Earth properly according to Jewish teachings. Next comes a section about ancient Jewish texts and "sacred words" that provide "specific instructions on how to be custodians of the world in which we live." Throughout the film, quotes from the Torah, illustrated with closeups of Hebrew scrolls, Jews praying, and nature scenes, will be contrasted with the various environmental threats facing humanity today.
82 millions d'années avant notre ère, à l'époque des dinosaures, d'immenses créatures marines peuplaient les océans. Sur le mode d'un documentaire-fiction, MONSTRES DES MERS 3D permet de percer le mystère de la disparition de ces géants des profondeurs mais surtout de suivre, en 3D relief, Dolly, une sympathique femelle Dolichorynchops à travers ses expériences périlleuses.
The film reports on controversies concerning and within the animal rights movement. These include external conflicts between animal rights advocates and medical researchers and restaurant operators, and internal disagreements within the animal rights movement between the animal shelter operators and the confrontationalists who demonstrate outside homes of corporate opponents. The film also discusses the comparison between animal liberation activists and political terrorists, including the FBI's ranking of animal-rights activists as the nation's No. 1 domestic terrorism threat.
Jean-Max, Axel, Jean-Michel, George and their "dalons", their friends, live near Dos d’Ane, a small village in the hills of Réunion Island. An athlete, a musician, a specialist in herbs, a scientist... They all love nature in their own way. From the nostalgia of nature’s generosity to its actual fragility, their outlooks change. Can the Circle of Mafate, way up high, continue to be the sanctuary of so many so.
Every year, there is a burning season in Indonesia. Areas of rainforest the size of Denmark are cut down and set alight by farmers and corporations to develop palm oil plantations. As well as destroying the habitat of critically endangered orangutans, new scientific evidence shows that deforestation comprises 20% of global carbon emissions, contributing significantly to climate change.