Impact Magazine 260th Issue on Sustainability

Page 48

Tahira takes a look at Hollywood blockbusters that have damaged the planet. When you watch a film, how often do you consider its production? Part of the joy of cinema is the momentary suspension of disbelief. To forget about the circus behind the lens and enjoy the clipped, cropped and edited result. Yet does our willing suspension of disbelief leave us blind to the path of environmental destruction left in its wake? This summer I found myself on a party boat circling the Thai island of Kho Pi Pi. The final destination of the trip was Maya Bay, the infamous setting of Leonardo DiCaprio’s 2000 film The Beach, which we could only look at from afar – the beach is now closed to tourists indefinitely.

Back in 2000, the filmmakers decided to strip away native vegetation, replace it with a nonindigenous species of coconut tree and flatten the entire beach

I can distinctly remember the tour guide’s fury as she spat: ‘We hate Leonardo DiCaprio in Thailand. He’s banned from this country’. Her Western tour guests chuckled nervously as she continued – ‘He’s f****d up the whole beach’.

Back in 2000, the filmmakers decided to strip away native vegetation, replace it with a non-indigenous species of coconut tree and flatten the entire beach. After they left, the beach began to erode and environmentalists launched a lawsuit against Fox and the Thai agriculture ministry for the

damage to the beach. To make matters worse, the popularity of the film inspired thousands of tourists to flock there daily, further damaging the beach. The BBC reports, around 80% of the coral around Maya Bay has now been destroyed. The survival of Maya Bay’s precious ecosystem is still uncertain today; all that life flattened and polluted for just one hour and fifty-nine minutes of screen time.

The worrying trend appears Let us to be that big, money-fuelled not take this Hollywood blockbusters are not planet for held accountable for grantenvironmental crimes, simply ed’ is because money talks the plea DiCaprio ended his Oscars acceptance speech with. Nearly two decades later, he is now one of Hollywood’s most prominent climate change activists. His campaigning over the years has been ignored by some in the film industry. Controversy surrounds the 2015 film Mad Max: Fury Road over claims that the film crew endangered rare Namibian species of reptiles and cacti. In 2011, the filming of The Expendables 2 damaged a natural monument home to over forty endangered species; and in 2017, the filmmakers behind Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales were accused of dumping toxic liquid into a creek in Queensland. The worrying trend appears to be that big, money-fuelled Hollywood blockbusters are not held accountable for environmental crimes, simply because money talks. While efforts have been made by some studios (20th Century Fox, Sony Pictures) to follow eco-friendly practises, there is still a long way to go before the film industry as a whole can be considered truly sustainable. Climate change is real, it is happening right now – it’s high time Hollywood joined the fight for our planet.

Tahira Rowe

Blockbusters and Busted Ecosystems

Illustration & Page Design by Natasha Phang-Lee

IMPACT

48


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Articles inside

Reduce, Reuse, Re-Craine?

1min
page 58

The Team

1min
pages 59-60

Euro 2020 and The Environment

3min
page 56

The Cost of Following Your Team Abroad

2min
page 54

Waste in Sport

3min
page 53

Environmental Sportswashing in Football

2min
page 52

The Impact of Vegan Diets on Athletes

2min
page 55

Gaming’s Dark Futures

2min
page 49

Making Festivals Sustainable

2min
page 50

Hollywood’s ‘Eco-Warriors’: Are They Doing Enough?

2min
page 47

Blockbusters and Busted Ecosystems

2min
page 48

to Airbrushed Travel? Is Eco-Friendly Travel Budget-Friendly?

3min
page 44

On Fire: A Poem About The Planet

1min
page 45

The Influencer Infestation: Time to put an end

3min
pages 42-43

Sustainability in Theatre

2min
page 46

Slowing Down Fast Fashion

6min
pages 40-41

The Phoenix Lab

5min
pages 38-39

Fairtrade: Is it really worth it?

2min
page 37

Selling Meat? The Pros and Cons of Palm Oil

3min
page 36

Our Earthly Heroes

6min
pages 26-31

How to Reduce your Carbon Footprint on

4min
pages 32-33

I’ve got 99 problems but Climate Change ain’t

11min
pages 22-25

Maintaining Your Personal Environment

7min
pages 20-21

Should the University of Nottingham Stop

5min
pages 34-35

Bad Banking

2min
page 19

3 Sustainable Student Life Habits to Avoid a

2min
page 18

The US’ withdrawal from the Paris Agreement

3min
page 14

Nottingham’s Initiatives for a Greener City

2min
page 15

How to become a more Sustainable Student

3min
page 17

An Interview with Lee Taylor, Environment and

4min
pages 12-13

The Vegan Stamp: for health or for wealth?

3min
page 16

Climategate: A Decade of Denial

5min
pages 8-9

The Government Stance on Climate Change

2min
page 10

A Climate Change Emergency

5min
pages 6-7
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