ENVIRONMENTAL Film Festival. Free Event. Thur. March 13th. 7pm

Carlton Cinemas
Thursday, March 13, 2025
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

WILDsound is proud to showcase the best ENVIRONMENTAL Films from the last year from around the world today.

Thursday March 13th. 7pm SHARP.

Event ends at 9pm.

90 minute program of films. Followed by Q&A with filmmakers in attendance.

Carlton Cinemas in downtown Toronto.

20 Carlton St., Toronto, ON M5B 2H5

(College Street Subway)

Tickets are FREE or Pay as you like. (Tickets generally sell out. First RSVP. First served.)

Email festival to RSVP tickets@wildsound.ca

Or, text the festival directly at 416-568-9046

See the full program of films: https://wildsoundfestivalreview.com/environmental-toronto-festival/

SEE THE LINEUP OF FILMS:

WHO SHOULD DECIDE THE FUTURE OF THE AMAZON?, 2min., Ecuador

Directed by Martin Kingman

The documentary “Who Should Decide the Future of the Amazon?” explores the struggle of indigenous peoples in Ecuador to protect their lands from extractive industries, emphasizing their fight for self-determination and the urgent need for governmental respect of their rights to safeguard the Amazon rainforest.

THIS LAND, 18min, UK – drama

Directed by Nicholas Jones

Roisin stands alone in the rugged Irish countryside, a guardian of the mystical land that has been in her family for generations. As a greedy relative seeks to exploit the earth beneath her feet, Roisin’s unwavering will and deep-rooted connection to the land propel her to fight back, unyielding in her defence of the magic that lies at the heart of the landscape.

DOLLARS THAT MAKE SENSE, 3min., USA

Directed by Richard Power Hoffmann

A fun, stop-motion animated film about how foundations need to align their endowments with their missions.

RECKONING WITH THE WENDIGO, 55min., Canada

Directed by Danielle Da Silva

Featuring Edmund Metatawabin—a residential school survivor who was the Chief of Fort Albany and recently received the Order of Canada—this timely feature documentary takes us to the birthplace of Canada’s fur trade to explore the ironic and deadly problem of food insecurity that exists there today. The chaotic times we are experiencing now have been prophecied by many Indigenous communities; one legend in particular forewarns us about the dangers of consumption and greed. This suspenseful/heartwrenching, yet intimate/heartwarming documentary offers a glimpse into the lives of Moose Cree people living in Canada’s North, exploring the allegory of the Wendigo and consumption.



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ENVIRONMENTAL Film Festival. Free Event. Thur. March 13th. 7pm

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