Artificial Planet WCFF 2025
Wildlife Conservation Film Festival 2025
•
20m
For the past 50 years, wildlife documentaries have been an integral part of conservation efforts, helping people connect to the natural world and raising awareness of contentious environmental issues. At the same time, technology, social media, and nearly universal access to cameras, have completely revolutionised the world of content creation. Recent advances in artificial intelligence could soon give way to films produced entirely by AI. What might that mean for the wildlife documentary film industry?
Chloe Warren, a young filmmaker studying Science Communication at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, is worried AI might make wildlife filmmaking job obsolete. However, recognizing the fact that wildlife filmmaking does have an ecological impact, she wonders if the technology might actually help reduce disturbance of fragile ecosystems and endangered species, and thus better serve conservation.
Up Next in Wildlife Conservation Film Festival 2025
-
313 WCFF 2025
313 is a two minute micro-short inspired by one of many David Attenboroughs quotes, exploring the relevance and legacy of animals on our planet. Decades or centuries down the line when generations past and when and time rewrites itself, will our wild neighbors become victims of vague assumptions,...
-
Born From The Reef WCFF 2025
'Born from the Reef' tells the story of Coco, a passionate and self-taught coral reef scientist from the Maldives. After increasingly frequent coral bleaching events, Coco and his team work to restore Maldivian coral reefs and protect those who rely on them. Using a cutting-edge strategy known as...
-
Gazing at Mount Da-Jian WCFF 2025
A young digital media graduate student returns to her hometown to document the nature of Kenting. Behind the camera, she rediscovers the land she once took for granted and unexpectedly witnesses her father's transformation from a hunter into a guardian of the environment. This is a story of inter...