Showing posts with label Best Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best Documentary. Show all posts

Jun 12, 2010

Oscar Winning Documentary 'The Cove' Faces Serious Protests


The Cove, an Oscar-winning documentary dealing with the slaughter of dolphins in Japan, is creating serious fuss as it finally secures a release in Japan

Protests by fisherman from the town of Taji, Wakayama, Japan, the location of the annual dolphin cull, dissuaded Japanese distributors from releasing the film into cinemas. In an attempt to tackle the protesters , Unplugged Pictures, which took on the doc, agreed to pixel-out fishermen’s faces in the Japanese version, but the temper has only increased as the June 26th release date approaches. Street protests as well as  sabotage threats have insisted two theatres to cancel bookings of the film.

The Cove

The rage has now intensified to right-wing activists, who say the film is unpatriotic. The Society to Seek the Restoration of Sovereignty stated that the work deliberately distorts Japanese people’s food culture, and depicting this will hurt countless people’s feelings.

Ric O’Barry,a former dolphin trainer on the TV show Flipper, whose crusade against the cull encouraged The Cove ,is reasonably disturbed. He stated that its not right that a minority of extremists could take this right away from them.Also doing so is an apparent threat to democracy.

Also,the protest has now encouraged a counter campaign by 50 film directors and journalists.Well..looks like the publicity is not likely to damage The Cove’s commercial prospects.

May 26, 2010

Best Documentary:The Cove

The Cove is a 2009 American documentary film that is written by Mark Monroe and directed by former National Geographic photographer Louie Psihoyos.It is based on the yearly killing of dolphins in a National Park at Taiji,Wakayama, in Japan from the point of view of anti-dolphin-hunting campaigner.

The Cove

The film focuses the fact that the number of dolphins killed in the Taiji dolphin hunting drive is many times superior than the number of whales killed in the Antarctic.Also research has revealed that 23,000 dolphins and porpoises are killed in Japan each year in the country's whaling industry. The migrating dolphins are herded into a hidden cove where they are netted and killed by using spears as well as knives over the side of small fishing boats.Portions of the film were filmed clandestinely during 2007 using underwater microphones and high-definition cameras disguised as rocks.

In addition to winning the Academy Award for Best Documentary Film, the documentary also won the U.S. Audience Award at the 25th annual Sundance Film Festival in Jan 2009.