Germany 2023, 104 minby Mi-Yong Brehm, Verena Feige
The sun impacts climate, time, biorhythms and the growth of all organisms on this planet. In Europe the influence of the sun is most remarkable in the Arctic Circle, in northern Scandinavia. The extreme alternation of light and darkness shapes nature as well as the everyday lives of the people and animals who call this place their home.The 2-part documentary follows the sun of Scandinavia in the northernmost countries of Europe, tells stories of day and night and goes through the year from the fixed points winter solstice on 21 December and the summer solstice on 21 June.
Scandinavia – Between Light and Darkness
Germany 2022, 50 minby Tim Visser, Sander van Iersel
When light pollution causes the night to disappear, a fundamental clock for life on earth is thrown out of balance. Animals and plants are threatened by artificial light. Many organisms have found their evolutionary niche in the dark of night and must now adapt to bright nights. Some succeed, but for many the brightness becomes a death trap - and causes species to die. Dedicated researchers now shed a new light on the effects of this nocturnal light on nature. Will science find solutions to the problem?
The Dark Side of the Bright Nights
2021, 156 minby Herbert Ostwald
Ostrich-sized rheas tramp on shoots of fields in Northern Germany. Flocks of bright green parrots screech along Cologne Cathedral. And beaver-like nutrias with orange teeth gnaw on Dutch dikes. All these animal nags are alien and are suspected of causing ecological and economic damage. Do the invaders have to be fought? Or is it just prejudice against hitherto unknown species?This small series of three films gets to the bottom of the accusations against alien species. For this purpose, the immigrated animals are observed in their new environment, their relationships to other species are shown and the latest scientific results are presented.
We Came to Stay - Our Alien Animal Neighbours
Germany 2020, 52 minby Daniela Pulverer, Boris Raim
What happens when an animal perishes in the depth of the forest? Who clears up the remains? Why aren’t we surrounded by carcasses? After all, death is a constant and universal visitor …Every death means life for zillions of other living organisms: it is the initiator of a complex cycle we all depend upon. But despite its importance, we know relatively little about the animals that move in after a body has died, the organisms that radically change the body’s chemistry, and the plants that recycle the valuable nutrients contained in every carcass. A film about life after death…
Banquet of the Beasts
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