Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson | |
---|---|
Directed by | Trish Dolman |
Produced by | Kevin Eastwood Trish Dolman |
Edited by | Brendan Woollard |
Music by | Michael Brook |
Production companies | Screen Siren Pictures Optic Nerve Films |
Distributed by | eOne Epix (USA) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 110 min |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson is a 2011 documentary film directed by Trish Dolman and produced by Kevin Eastwood. [1] It follows radical conservationist Paul Watson during anti-whaling campaigns in the Antarctic in 2009 and 2010, and recounts his history and controversial methods as an activist and media personality. It premiered May 1, 2011 at the Hot Docs Documentary Film Festival.
The film begins as Watson and members of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society are arriving in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary on board the RV Farley Mowat , in search of illegal whaling operations. They come upon the Japanese whaling supply vessel Oriental Bluebird and warn the crew to leave the area, but they refuse. Playing "Ride of the Valkyries" on a loudspeaker, the Farley Mowat then approaches and broadsides the Bluebird using a welded steel blade that protrudes from the hull of the boat—a demonstration of the kind of tactics Watson and the Sea Shepherds are known for.
The film then goes into an account of Watson's long and controversial history as an activist, going into depth about his role in co-founding Greenpeace, his subsequent disagreements with its other founders, and his separation from the organization to found his own Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Using interviews with key figures in the environmental movement as well as news footage from the 1970s through the 2000s, the film recounts confrontations with various hunting and fishing bodies over the past 30 years which shaped Watson's methodology as an activist.
Throughout the film Watson faces problems with the international legal system, aging boats, inexperienced crew, fundraising, and criticism from his colleagues and family.
Eco-Pirate includes interviews with Paul Watson, Ross Wursthorne, Patrick Moore, Martin Sheen, Alex Cornelissen, Emily Hunter, Jeff Watkins, Peter Hammarstedt, Karen Sack, Rex Weyler, Bob Hunter, Paul Spong, Allison Lance, Lani Lum Watson, Chris Aultman, David Suzuki, Farley Mowat, Peter Garrett, Andrew Darby, Joji Morishita, Pablo Salas, Loyola Hearn, Anthony Kiedis, Pete Bethune, and Terri Irwin. [1]
Eco-Pirate was shot over seven years [2] in the Antarctic, the Galápagos Islands, North America, South America, Australia, and New Zealand. [1]
In an interview with Point of View , Trish Dolman reports struggling to obtain fresh-sounding interviews from Watson since he is a consummate media-man and has told his stories so many times, particularly that of the 1975 confrontation with a Soviet whaling fleet and its prey. She says it took some "nudging" to get the vivid account he gives in the film. [3]
The film includes an epilogue containing footage of the 2009-10 Antarctic Expedition "Operation: Waltzing Matilda" in which the Japanese whaling vessel MV Shonan Maru 2 collided with Sea Shepherd's MY Ady Gil, destroying the latter.
The film was produced with the participation of Superchannel, eOne, the Telefilm Canada Theatrical Documentary Program, and the Rogers Documentary Fund.
The film had its world premiere on May 1, 2011 at the Hot Docs Documentary Film Festival in Toronto. [4] It opened theatrically on July 22, 2011 at the TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto, and Fifth Avenue Cinemas in Vancouver.
Katherine Monk of the Vancouver Sun called Eco-Pirate a "thoroughly thought-provoking and emotionally poignant portrait of a Canadian outlaw" while praising director Dolman for maintaining distance from her subject: "She gets intimate material, but she’s clearly never seduced by Watson’s eco-charms to the point of being putty-headed." [5]
Robert Bell of exclaim.ca criticized the film by calling it "a dissection of a Canadian figurehead [which] never finds its flow or footing." [6]
However Drew Kerr of torontoscreenshots.com called the film "a well-rounded portrayal of the man", acknowledging its portrayal of Watson's "genius" and "oddball charm" while praising its use of interviews which are "highly critical" of him. [7]
Referring to her balanced approach with the film, Watson was quoted in a Georgia Straight interview: "It’s down the middle. Trish has tried to present the side that opposes me and the side that supports me, and I think she did a good job on it." [8]
The Globe and Mail praised the film as a "refreshingly rounded picture of a modern real-life action hero." [9]
Eco-Pirate was nominated for Best Documentary at the 2011 Warsaw International Film Festival, it won the RIFF Environmental Award at the 2011 Reykjavík International Film Festival, and it won Best Documentary at the 2011 Projecting Change Film Festival where Watson himself introduced the film. [10]
At the 2012 Leo Awards it was nominated for Best Direction in a Documentary Program or Series (Trish Dolman), Best Documentary (Trish Dolman and Kevin Eastwood, producers), Best Musical Score in a Documentary Program or Series (Michael Brook) and Best Picture Editing in a Documentary Program or Series (Brendan Woollard). [11]
Farley McGill Mowat, was a Canadian writer and environmentalist. His works were translated into 52 languages, and he sold more than 17 million books. He achieved fame with the publication of his books on the Canadian north, such as People of the Deer (1952) and Never Cry Wolf (1963). The latter, an account of his experiences with wolves in the Arctic, was made into a film of the same name released in 1983. For his body of work as a writer he won the annual Vicky Metcalf Award for Children's Literature in 1970.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) is a non-profit, marine conservation activism organization based in Friday Harbor on San Juan Island, Washington, in the United States. Sea Shepherd employs direct action tactics to achieve its goals, most famously by deploying its fleet of ships to track, report on and actively impede the work of fishing vessels believed to be engaged in illegal and unregulated activities causing the unsustainable exploitation of marine life.
Paul Franklin Watson is a Canadian-American environmental, conservation and animal rights activist, who founded the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, an anti-poaching and direct action group focused on marine conservation activism. The tactics used by Sea Shepherd have attracted opposition, with the group accused of eco-terrorism by both the Japanese government and Greenpeace. Watson is a citizen of Canada and the United States.
RV Farley Mowat was a long-range, ice class ship. Originally built as a Norwegian fisheries research and enforcement vessel, she was purchased by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society in Edinburgh, Scotland, in August 1996. Originally named Sea Shepherd III, the name was changed in 1999 to Ocean Warrior, before eventually being renamed in 2002 after Canadian writer Farley Mowat.
Robert Lorne Hunter was a Canadian environmentalist, journalist, author and politician. He was a member of the Don't Make a Wave Committee in 1969, and a co-founder of Greenpeace in 1971 and its first president. He led the first on-sea anti-whaling campaigns in the world, against Russian and Australian whalers, which helped lead to the ban on commercial whaling. He campaigned against nuclear testing, the Canadian seal hunt and later, climate change with his book Thermageddon: Countdown to 2030. He was named by Time as one of the "Eco-Heroes" of the 20th century.
Neptune's Navy is the name that the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society uses to refer to the ships it operates.
The Cove is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Louie Psihoyos that analyzes and questions dolphin hunting practices in Japan. It was awarded the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2010. The film is a call to action to halt mass dolphin kills and captures, change Japanese fishing practices, and inform and educate the public about captivity and the increasing hazard of mercury poisoning from consuming dolphin meat.
The MV Steve Irwin was the 59-metre (194 ft) flagship of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and was used in their direct action campaigns against whaling and against illegal fisheries activities. The vessel was built in 1975 and formerly served as a Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency conservation enforcement patrol boat, the FPV Westra, for 28 years.
Canada's 2008 annual commercial seal hunt in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and around Newfoundland, Quebec and Nova Scotia began on March 28. The hunting season lasts from mid-November to mid-May, but the hunt mainly occurs in March and April. Canada's seal hunt is the world's largest hunt for marine mammals.
Whale Wars was a weekly American documentary-style reality television series that premiered on November 7, 2008 on the Animal Planet cable channel. The program follows Paul Watson, founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, as he and the crew aboard their various vessels attempted to stop the killing of whales by Japanese vessels (whalers) off the coast of Antarctica.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society engages in various demonstrations, campaigns, and tactical operations at sea and elsewhere, including conventional protests and direct actions to protect marine wildlife. Sea Shepherd operations have included interdiction against commercial fishing, shark poaching and finning, seal hunting and whaling. Many of their activities have been called piracy or terrorism by their targets and by the ICRW. Sea Shepherd says that they have taken more than 4,000 volunteers on operations over a period of 30 years.
Anti-whaling refers to actions taken by those who seek to end whaling in various forms, whether locally or globally in the pursuit of marine conservation. Such activism is often a response to specific conflicts with pro-whaling countries and organizations that practice commercial whaling and/or research whaling, as well as with indigenous groups engaged in subsistence whaling. Some anti-whaling factions have received criticism and legal action for extreme methods including violent direct action. The term anti-whaling may also be used to describe beliefs and activities related to these actions.
At the Edge of the World is a 2008 documentary which chronicles the efforts of animal rights activist Paul Watson and 45 other volunteers, who set out in two Sea Shepherd ships to hinder the Japanese whaling fleet in the waters around Antarctica. The film won Best Environmental Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival. Director and Producer Dan Stone would later produce the first season of Whale Wars. It depicts what actually went on during this excursion, with clips of beautiful scenery, news clips, whaling in action, and life on the ship.
Emily Hunter is a Canadian activist, author and filmmaker. She is the daughter of the late Robert Hunter, first president of Greenpeace and Bobbi Hunter, co-founder of Greenpeace. She has been a campaigner for nearly a decade on numerous environmental causes, from fighting whaling to climate change. She is known in Canada as a writer for THIS magazine and as environmental correspondent for MTV News.
John Kastner was a four-time Emmy Award-winning Canadian documentary filmmaker whose later work focused on the Canadian criminal justice system. His films included the documentaries Out of Mind, Out of Sight (2014), a film about patients at the Brockville Mental Health Centre, named best Canadian feature documentary at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival; NCR: Not Criminally Responsible (2013), exploring the personal impact of the mental disorder defence in Canada; Life with Murder (2010), The Lifer and the Lady and Parole Dance, and the 1986 made-for-television drama Turning to Stone, set in the Prison for Women in Kingston, Ontario.
Haida Modern is a 2019 Canadian documentary film about the art and activism of Haida artist Robert Davidson. The film was directed by Charles Wilkinson, filmed, produced and edited by Wilkinson and Tina Schliessler and executive produced by Kevin Eastwood. It premiered at the 2019 Vancouver International Film Festival.
MV John Paul DeJoria was a former United States Coast Guard cutter owned and operated by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Until scrapped, she was used in their direct action campaigns against illegal fisheries activities.
Trish Dolman is a Canadian film and television director and producer. She is most noted for her 2017 documentary film Canada in a Day, for which she won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Direction in a Documentary Program at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards in 2018.
Kevin Eastwood is a Canadian documentary filmmaker and film and television producer. He is best known for directing the Knowledge Network series Emergency Room: Life + Death at VGH and British Columbia: An Untold History and the CBC Television documentaries Humboldt: The New Season and After the Sirens. His credits as a producer include the movies Fido, Preggoland and The Delicate Art of Parking, the television series The Romeo Section, and the documentaries Haida Modern, Haida Gwaii: On the Edge of the World and Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson.
Tim Gorski is an American cinematographer, film producer and animal welfare activist, known for his documentaries concerning animal welfare and wildlife conservation, among them the piece How I Became an Elephant (2012), which has received awards and favorable reviews in the media, and his earlier piece Lolita: Slave to Entertainment (2003). Gorski's filmography is visible online.