Home (2009 film): Difference between revisions

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| cinematography = Michel Benjamin<br />Dominique Gentil
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| narrator = [[Glenn Close]] {{small|(English and Dutch)}}<br />[[Jacques Gamblin]] {{small|(French)}}<br />[[Salma Hayek]] {{small|(Spanish)}}<br>[[Zhou Xun]] {{small|(Mandarin)}}
| narrator = [[Glenn Close]] {{small|(English and Dutch)}}<br />[[Jacques Gamblin]] {{small|(French)}}<br />[[Salma Hayek]] {{small|(Spanish)}}<br>[[Zhou Xun]] {{small|(Mandarin)}}
| music = [[Armand Amar]]
| music = [[Armand Amar]]
| cinematography = [[Michel Benjamin]]<br />[[Dominique Gentil]]
| cinematography = [[Michel Benjamin]]<br />Dominique Gentil
| editing = Yen le Van
| editing = Yen le Van
| studio = [[Europa Corp.]]
| studio = [[Europa Corp.]]

Revision as of 05:21, 28 July 2011

Home
The film's title card
Directed byYann Arthus-Bertrand
Written byIsabelle Delannoy
Yann Arthus-Bertrand
Denis Carot
Yen le Van
Produced byDenis Carot
Luc Besson
Narrated byGlenn Close (English and Dutch)
Jacques Gamblin (French)
Salma Hayek (Spanish)
Zhou Xun (Mandarin)
CinematographyMichel Benjamin
Dominique Gentil
Edited byYen le Van
Music byArmand Amar
Production
company
Distributed byEuropa Corp., with sponsorship from PPR
Release date
  • June 5, 2009 (2009-06-05)
Running time
120 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film France
Budget$12 million

Home is a 2009 documentary by Yann Arthus-Bertrand. The film is almost entirely composed of aerial shots of various places on Earth. It shows the diversity of life on Earth and how humanity is threatening the ecological balance of the planet. The movie was released simultaneously on June 5, 2009 in cinemas across the globe, on DVD, Blu-ray, television, and on YouTube, opening in 181 countries. The film was financed by PPR, a French multinational holding company specializing in retail shops and luxury brands, as part of their PR strategy.[1][2]

Overview

The documentary chronicles the present day state of the Earth, its climate and how we as the dominant species have long-term repercussions on its future. A theme expressed throughout the documentary is that of linkage—how all organisms and the Earth are linked in a "delicate but crucial" natural balance with each other, and how no organism can be self-sufficient.

The first 15 minutes include footage of the beginning of the natural world, starting with single-celled algae developing at the edges of volcanic springs. By showing algae's essential role in the evolution of photosynthesis, it also explores the innumerable species of plants which all have their origins in this one-celled life form.

In the rest of the first hour of the film, the documentary takes on a more human-oriented focus, showing the agricultural revolution and its impacts, before moving on to talk about the harnessing of oil, leading to fire, industry, cities and inequality gaps like never before. It portrays the current predicament regarding cattle ranches, deforestation, food and water shortages, the use of non-renewable "fossil water", the over-quarrying crisis and the shortage of energy, namely electricity. Cities such as New York City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Shenzhen, Mumbai, Tokyo and Dubai are used as examples of the mismanagement and wastage of energy, water and food. The recession of marshlands and glaciers are shown in vast aerial shots of Antarctica, The North Pole and Africa, while mass emigration and refugee counts are shown currently and forecast in the event that these events remains unchanged.

It is at this point that the film begins to focus on global warming and the carbon crisis. Home shows how melting glaciers, rising sea levels and changing weather patterns are ravaging the people who have least to do with climate change, but also how it soon will affect rich populous areas.

Here, about three minutes of film is given to displaying harsh facts in large white text on a black background followed by a video representation of the fact. This is followed by a positive conclusion. The documentary claims to show the "awful truths" regarding our impact on the Earth, but also what we are now doing to combat and reverse it: including renewable energy, the creation of more and more national parks, international co-operation between various nations on environmental issues and the extra education and reform being had across the globe in response to the current problems facing the earth.

Production

Home was filmed in various stages due to the expanse of the areas portrayed. Taking over eighteen months to complete, director Yann Arthus-Bertrand and a camera man, a camera engineer and a pilot flew in a small helicopter through various regions in over fifty countries. The filming was done using high-definition "Cineflex" cameras which were suspended from a gyro-stabilized sphere from rails on the base of the helicopter. These cameras, originally manufactured for army firing equipment, reduce vibrations helping to capture smooth images, which appear as if they had been filmed from crane arms or dollies. After almost every flight, recordings were immediately checked to ensure they were usable.[3] After filming was complete, Besson and his crew had over 488 hours of footage to edit.[4]

Distribution and promotion

File:Press-HOME.jpg
Director Yann Arthus-Bertrand (left) and Co-Producer Luc Besson at the Home press-conference on March 9, 2009

To promote the documentary online, a YouTube channel known as "HomeProject" was created. Uploaded to this were various short clips of filming which took place in different parts of the world including the Arctic Circle, Africa and the large metropolises featured.

On March 9, 2009, a press-conference was held in Paris, France, where Yann Arthus-Bertrand and various producers talked to the media about the issues raised in the film, as well as confirming that Home would be the first film ever to be simultaneously released in theaters, on television, on DVD and on the Internet in five continents.[5]

On May 5, 2009, a second press-conference was held again in Paris, where the same crew members announced that the film's release date would be June 5, 2009, World Environment Day. Here, they also announced that Home would be 100% free for everyone to view, as "The benefits of this film cannot be counted in dollars, but in audience figures." They also revealed that PPR was going to sponsor the film in order to facilitate unavoidable costs.[6]

The film, which was available for free release until June 14, has been broadcast in 14 languages.[7] The Blu-ray edition was released by 20th Century Fox and features both the English and French versions. It is expected to sell in excess of 100,000 copies. When production costs are met, all proceeds sale takings will go to the Good Planet Company.[8][9]

Copyright and Redistribution Rights

Yann Arthus-Bertrand said in a TED talk [10] that the movie has no copyright: "This film have [sic] no copyright. On the fifth of June, the environmental day, everyone can download the movie on Internet. The film is given for free to the distributor for TV and theater to show it the five of June. There is no business on this movie. It is available for schools, cities, NGOs and you." Nevertheless, a copyright notice appears in the final credits.

Several high resolution editions of the movie are available for download. ClearBits, an online digital media community, provides a torrent of the 93-minute version in high-definition mp4 format, and Archive.org and Vimeo also offer high resolution editions.

Public Response

The film received a large response upon release, receiving over 400,000 combined views within the first 24 hours on YouTube.[citation needed] As of April 2010, the French, English, German, Spanish, Russian and Arabic versions on Youtube logged a total of more than 14 million views. It was shown to high ratings on channels around the world including the international network National Geographic. France2 débuted the film to over 8.3 million viewers in France alone.[7] In India, Home was shown exclusively via the STAR World cable network.[11]

Critical reviews

Generally, the movie was praised for its visuals but received criticism regarding the attitude of the narration and the contradiction between its message and the sponsors' legacy.

Jeannette Catsoulis of the New York Times criticizes the film's narration and Glen Close, narrator in the English version, both regarding content and style: "We’ve heard it all before, if not in the schoolmarmish tones of Glenn Close, whose patronizing narration [...] makes the film feel almost as long as the life of its subject." Furthermore, she denounces the film's accusations towards the modern "lifestyle that 'destroys the essential to produce the superfluous' — an accusation that the film’s bankrollers, led by the corporation behind luxury brands like Balenciaga and Gucci, are probably familiar with..."[12]

Jean-Michel Frodon, a French movie critic, expressed the opinion that "‘Home’ had many viewers but didn’t have much echo" because Arthus-Bertrand’s personality, activities and his innovative no-cost concept have captured more attention than the movie itself.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home - The Movie". PPR. Retrieved 2010-06-01. [dead link]
  2. ^ Marvier, Marie (2009-06-05). "Ecologie : Home, le nouveau film de Yann Arthus-Bertrand". Culture (in French). Paris, France: France-Soir. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  3. ^ Home- The shooting on YouTube
  4. ^ AFP: Worldwide release of 'greatest green event ever' at Google News
  5. ^ Home- Press conference March 9th 2009 on YouTube
  6. ^ Home- Press Conference May 5th 2009 on YouTube
  7. ^ a b Lucas, Angel Herrero (2009-06-06). "HOME, un hymne à la Terre couronné de succès" (in French). France 2. Retrieved 2009-06-25. [dead link]
  8. ^ Home Documentary Gets Wide Release
  9. ^ The Associated Press: 'Home' documentary a risk for Gucci parent PPR at Google News
  10. ^ Yann Arthus-Bertrand captures fragile Earth in wide-angle at TED
  11. ^ Don’t miss your date with the planet
  12. ^ Our Planet’s Destruction in Yummy Colors, Jeannette Catsoulis, February 3, 2011
  13. ^ For a Filmmaker, the Green Things in Life Are Free, Maia de la Baume, January 28, 2011

External links