Cookies help us run our site more efficiently.

By clicking “Accept”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. View our Privacy Policy for more information or to customize your cookie preferences.

Cinema Verde has sourced and curated independent environmental films since 2010.
Subscribe today for full streaming access

Subscribe NowStart Streaming

Award-Winning Films For A Sustainable Future

Now Playing

All Trailers

Star is a bird of many names. Kārearea, kāiaia, the New Zealand falcon. Aotearoa was once a nation of manu. Winged creatures reigned: bats, bugs and birds. Whilst flightless creatures crawled the land, the skies were ruled by aerial predators, some of these birds almost mythical in size. Yet with the arrival of humans came great change. Today, many manu linger only in legend. But a few birds of prey remain, including the feisty kārearea. The New Zealand falcon didn’t survive these changing years unscathed. Kārearea are even rarer than the kiwi. But they won’t go down without a fight. Through both traditional filmmaking and stop-motion animation, Tōku Waiata / My Song soars Aotearoa's skies alongside Star, an advocacy falcon at Wingspan Birds of Prey Centre. Here, a rather different conservation practice is used to conserve New Zealand's only falcon; the ancient art of falconry.

Tōku Waiata / My Song

In the early 1990s, agricultural corporations and other investors began buying thousands of acres of cultivated and uncultivated land with water rights in the scenic wine country of San Luis Obispo County, California. They planted more vineyards and sank dozens of deep, powerful wells for irrigation that have over-drafted the already depleted Paso Robles Basin aquifer. Around 2010, the shallower wells of hundreds of country homes and small farms and ranches began failing. This documentary tells that story through the voices of three small landowners who lost their livelihoods and hopes for their futures when their wells went dry. The film then follows how they and their supporters organize social force to participate in local political processes to assert their water rights and their concerns for the environmental health of the Paso Basin.

Dry Wells of the Paso Basin: A Tragedy of the Commons

Does whale watching protect or harm whales? This film explores heated controversies over whale watching, boat noise, and orca conservation in Washington State and British Columbia. Whale watching companies claim that they serve as "sentinels" protecting the orca from unwary recreational boaters, ferries, and ships. A number of local conservationists and scientists have argued that whale watching boats crowd and harass whales, while adding noise to the orcas' immediate environment that makes it difficult for the social species to survive. "Sentinels of Silence?" uses dramatic imagery, peer-reviewed science, and interviews with conservationists, scientists, and industry officials to bring a fascinating chapter in the orca conservation story to light. In December, 2020, three months after Sentinels of Silence? was released, the Washington State Fish and Wildlife Commission made an historic decision to more closely regulate whale watching companies' activities around the Southern Resident Killer Whales, citing noise and harassment as factors.

Sentinels of Silence? Whale Watching, Noise, and the Orca

Exclusive Director Discussions

More talks

Listen to our podcast

Cinema Verde's Director Discussions are now available on your favorite platforms. Join us!
Listen Now

How To Attend Cinema Verde

Subscribe now
Watch Trailers

Want to get a sneak peek of the Cinema Verde Virtual Screening selections and Exclusive Filmmaker Discussions? Click to watch the trailers.

Trailers
Buy a Pass

We offer a variety of subscription plans. Passes are available for daily, monthly, and annual memberships.

Tickets
View Films

Ready to view the best environmental films from around the world? Click below to enter the Virtual Screenings, accessible to members only.

Films

Find us on Roku

Embark on a cinematic journey of exploration and discovery with the new Cinema Verde channel on Roku. Dive into a world where stunning visuals and powerful storytelling come together to raise awareness and drive positive change. Learn more about our channel's offerings or add Cinema Verde to your Roku device today.

A screenshot of the Cinema Verde channel on Roku featuring the film, "Home Waters".

Gift Memberships now available

BUY NOW

We've made it a whole lot easier to give the gift of environmental awareness. Simply select one of our gift membership options at checkout, and we'll send your loved one an invitation to their shiny new membership plan.

More News

Join us to forge
a sustainable future

Our team is always growing.
Become a partner, volunteer, sponsor, or intern today.
Let us know how you would like to get involved!

CONTACT US

sign up for our mailing list to stay informed on the latest films and environmental headlines.

Subscribers receive a free day pass for streaming Cinema Verde.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.