Availability
Details
PUBLISHED
©2009
EDITION
DESCRIPTION
1 videodisc (83 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in
ISBN/ISSN
LANGUAGE
NOTES
Film originally produced in 2008
Includes bonus scenes (ca. 32 min.) ; updates (slideshow)
"A ferocious kill on the Serengeti; warnings about endangered species... These clichés of nature films ignore a key landscape feature: villagers just off-camera who endure the dangers and costs of living with wild animals. The Maasai tribe of Kenya and Namibia's Himba -- two of earth's oldest cattle cultures -- are emerging from a century of 'white man's conservation,' which threw them off their lands, banned subsistence hunting and fueled resentment. They are discovering that earnings from wildlife tourism can rival the benefits of livestock. But change is not easy. Charting the collision of ancient ways with Western expectations, [this film] offers complex, intimate stories of Africans at the forefront of community-based conservation." -- Container
Photographed by Jason Longo ; original music, Mark Bandy
Narrator, Munyikombo Bukusi
DVD
Dialogue in English and Masai, with English subtitles; closed-captioned