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The Story of Stuff Project

In 2007, Annie Leonard set out to educate consumers about the impact of their purchasing decisions with a 20 minute cartoon. Today, The Story of Stuff has been viewed over 15 million times (and counting!) making it one of the most watched  environmental-themed movies of all time. In 2008, Leonard started The Story of Stuff non-profit in response to viewer response to get involved. The non-profit continues to educate by making short films exploring humans relationships with “stuff.”
View Web site
Twitter: @storyofstuff
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Tapped

Is access to clean water a basic human right or a commodity?  The award-winning documentary, Tapped, from the producers of Who Killed the Electric Car?, reviews the health and environmental impacts of bottled water as well as the issue of privatization. It provides an excellent behind-the-scenes look at the unregulated world of the bottled water industry.
View Film Web site
Twitter: @Tappedthemovie
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Who Killed the Electric Car?

The number of electric cars on the road today keeps growing. But, did you know that they first started appearing in 1996? Who Killed the Electric Car? explores the initial creation and subsequent dismantling of the the battery-powered, electric vehicle by General Motors in the mid-1990s. The film features interviews with former electric vehicle owners, political figures and engineers and explores the roles that lobbyists, government policies, car corporations and oil companies may have played in the eventual dismantling of the General Motors EV-1 program.
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Crude

This provocative, and award-winning, David-vs-Goliath documentary explores the ongoing lawsuit filed by 30,000 indigenous Ecuadorans against Chevron/Texaco for their oil exploration and exploitation efforts in the Amazon. Berlinger interviews the plaintiffs, their attorneys as well as Chevron employees and attorneys. The film takes you from  contamination sites to the court rooms in an attempt to determine if that’s oil in the soil and water of the fragile Amazon eco-system and if it is who’s responsible for cleaning it up.
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Twitter: @crudethemovie  
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Flow

Some experts believe that the most important political and environmental issue of the 21st century is the growing global water crisis. This award-winning documentary examines the crisis from local and global perspectives. It features interviews with top scientists and activists as well as with the people and organizations working toward finding solutions to protecting the resource that sustains all beings.
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Bag It

This DIY, shot-on-video documentary asks the viewer to determine if life is “too plastic.”Bag It examines society’s use and abuse of plastic educating viewers on the politics of plastic, waste and recycling issues and effects on human and environmental health. It also provides plenty of actionable ways to change society’s overconsumption of plastic. Are you ready to bag it?
More About the Film  
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Vanishing of the Bees

This remarkable documentary examines the mysterious disappearance of honeybees over the past several years. This crisis affects everyone, because commercial honeybee operations pollinate crops that make up one out of every three bites of the food we eat.
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No Impact Man

by Colin Beavan
The book and documentary chronicle the adventures of the Beavan family as they try to abandon a high-consumption lifestyle for a year. In order to reduce their carbon footprint, the New York City family gives up meat, automated transportation, electricity and no non-local food.
Review at Amazon.com
About the Film  
dirtmovie

Dirt! The Movie

Fascinating insights on how soil profoundly impacts human health, food quality, the environment, our economy and more — and why our current soil-management strategies must change.
More About the Film