Anthropocene: The Human Epoch (2018) Poster

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8/10
Something Better Change... and not only the name of the Epoch
Davor_Blazevic_195917 May 2019
In the opening titles of Canadian documentary "Anthropocene: The Human Epoch" (2018), directed by Jennifer Baichwal (who also wrote all the comments, sparingly provided, whether as onscreen titles, or as Alicia Vikander's occasionally didactically delivered narration), Edward Burtynsky and Nicholas de Pencier, a proposal which has been already a long-standing one in responsible scientific circles, is getting repeated, a need to change the name of the current geological epoch from the Holocen, which is, literally, the "wholly recent" period of geological time, to the Anthropocene, which would be, literally, the "humanly recent" period of geological time.

What follows is a photographic evidence, collected on camera over the last four years from six continents, all except for Antarctica, showing results of numerous examples of human activities proving that exactly humans are the primary cause of permanent planetary changes, most noticeably pronounced since the middle of 20th century, but extensively evident even in the last two and a half centuries, marked with the advancement of industrial revolutions, from the first one in the second half of 18th century, to the fourth one which is building up right now. Humans more than any other forces of nature, even more than all other natural phenomena combined, most notably including erosion, sedimentation, weather (temperature and precipitation activities), thunders, winds and tornadoes, tidal flow, and natural disasters such as volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.

In an almost unique successful diverge from otherwise mostly gravely thought and dead serious subjects, in Russia's potash mines in Ural, two miners are sitting and having a tee right in front of the camera, guessing the comments of future spectators of the scene, something like: "Oh, those Russians, that's how they work, sit and drink a tee". While still speculating whether camera, which records the moment, takes only a video, or an audio as well, one of the tee-drinkers exclaims "I love my job!" Well, who wouldn't... sitting, having a tee, and getting paid for it!

The filmmakers have circumnavigated the globe to visualize the strength and demonstrate the extent, henceforth simplify the grasp and facilitate the perception of human planetary footprint and, if it continues to be abused, domination which might lead to damnation.

Sometimes in awe, more often in mind-blowing disbelief we're witnessing: gigantic open pit nickel-copper-cobalt-palladium mine and all-direction underground corridors in Norilsk, Siberia, the most polluted city in Russia, and among the ten most polluted in the world... concrete seawalls in China that by now protect from maritime erosion 60% of the mainland coast... mind-altering potash mines in Russia's Ural mountains, contrasting on two levels, emotional and intellectual, attraction and disruption... lithium evaporation ponds in Chile's Atacama desert, surreal in appearance while photographed from drone perspective... East Africa's largest garbage dump, Dandora landfill in Kenya, constantly searched by poor people and marabou storks, hoping to get lucky and find things of value amidst all the trash... a bucket-wheel excavators (Bagger 288 and 293) at the open pit coal mine in Hambach in Germany, as if they came out of an SF movie, the biggest terrestrial machines ever built... the world's longest and deepest rail tunnel in Switzerland, the 57.5 km long, 2.3 km under the surface at its deepest point, twin-bore Gotthard base tunnel, providing a high-speed rail link under the Swiss Alps between northern and southern Europe... incredible vistas of Carrara marble quarries in the Apuan Alps of northern Tuscany, Italy... massive cutting at breakneck speed, causing destruction of Canada's finest and grandest, last remaining, ergo rare and endangered old-growth rainforests on Vancouver Island...

Presented scenes, like those from conservation sanctuaries in Kenya, from the London Zoo... deal also with the ever so alarmingly growing issue of species extinction...

Images captured in this documentary are impressive, often aggressive, sounds are seldom pleasant, almost always unnatural, expressing how we have transformed (malformed) the planet, exactly reflecting on how human activity alters our earthly landscapes and habitats: forcefully and abnormally. But strangely, results are more than once rather artistic, and even though contradicting the rational disturbance they cause, and therefore intellectually being rightfully repulsive, a good number of these fabricated vistas aesthetically appear quite appealing. But, content-wise, that's all what's good in this documentary. So, if we want to continue carving and digging, tunneling and bridging, spanning and rigging, engineering and painting our earthly canvas and within, no matter how artistic it turns out to be, basically ripping off this planet, replacing its natural versatility with techno uniformity, making it devoid of its self-sustainable habitats, thus bringing more and more other species to extinction, let us serve ourselves, until we're the last ones, and then be extinct we surely will. But if we want to regain the harmonious existence of all living beings inhabiting this earthly abode we've been given, we better change, change for better and change a lot.
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8/10
Disturbingly Beautiful
Blue-Grotto2 October 2018
With 12,000 ton and ten story high machines on the move in German forests, pools of lithium gleaming in the Atacama Desert sun, 10,000 elephant tusks on fire in Kenya, furnaces glowing in the world's largest heavy metal smelter in Norilsk and Lagos growing to 20 million inhabitants, we tipped the balance of the earth. The Holocene Epoch is done and the age of mass extinction, planet altering industry and swift climate change gaining momentum.

This astonishing, mesmerizing and disturbingly beautiful documentary presents stunning images and commentary from around the world with the hope that human tenacity and ingenuity might assume a new direction. It is not accusatory but grounded in humility and open-mindedness (what humanity needs for any shift in consciousness). It is not a vision or rumination on the future but what is real and already here. What a wakeup call! Grounding moments of humor and insight, such as when Russian women talking about little flowers blooming in barren rock and Russian men joking about their work, brighten the film. I wish there was more depth in places, but overall Anthropocene is insightful, revelatory and compelling. Seen at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival with the directors in attendance and providing input for this review. They recorded 300 hours per one hour of film.
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8/10
Also Known As...
Xstal18 May 2020
The Scarred Epoch The Barren Epoch The Ravaged Epoch The Desert Epoch The Scorched Epoch The Wasted Epoch The Extinct Epoch The Drowned Epoch The Poisoned Epoch The Plastic Epoch The Final Epoch
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7/10
Unique and timely
proud_luddite11 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Continuing in a series of Canadian documentaries (preceded by "Manufacturing Landscapes" and "Watermark"), "Anthropocene" travels to many regions of the world to show the impact of humans on the planet and the planet's adjustments to such changes.

There are a variety of places and situations covered in this fine film. Many include factories as well as outdoor excavations. The movie's success lies in its "less is more" approach where narration is minimal as it allows the brilliant camerawork to let the viewers reach their own conclusions as quietly as possible.

Some visuals stand out: the sidewalks and restaurants of Venice during a flood; people scavenging a landfill site in Kenya; a massive collection of elephant tusks in designed piles, also in Kenya; the partial destruction of a forest in British Columbia; and, most shocking, watching the destruction of a beautiful, old, historical church in a small German town. (In a strange way, it was a relief to know that my home city of Toronto is not the only place dedicated to destroying its architectural heritage.)

Near the end, the minimalist style starts to wear a bit thin but this does not in any way diminish the film's important and timely message. It is both educating and moving. - dbamateurcritic
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9/10
Agent Smith in The Matrix said it best!
blownwideopen26 October 2019
Humans are a disease, a cancer on this planet. We are a plague. Spreading like a virus. :(
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7/10
Amazing shots, but scenes are too repetitive.
me_is_we29 September 2019
Different background, but pretty much same scenes. Would've worked if there were less scenes. This documentary should be 60 mins max.
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8/10
Pure visual poetry
sarahgavian7 October 2019
While some reviewers feel they needed more information, I was content to revel in the exquisite images marked by section headings and occasional narration. Yes, there is so so much more that could be asked, and it would be great if there were accompanying materials for those who want to follow up, but I was simply swept away by the images (and drone work!) telling the simple truth about human transformation of the planet. (I do confess that I whipped out pen and paper in the middle of the film to note down the place names so I could Google them later). I am also a subscriber to Overview on Instagram which likewise documents human earthworks, in that case with a bit more narrative.

My biggest regret is not (yet) finding a way to watch this film again, at home, slowly.
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6/10
Interesting but not enough
popcolin1 May 2019
Update: after thinking about this for a few more hours (it is good enough for that, afterall) I bumped it up a star thinking about some of the incredible locations captured. They really did their research there. ---------- Not sure why there would be a narration if it only comes on every 5 or so minutes to explain VERY LITTLE about what we are seeing. Honestly most of the movie I was very very confused. Also the whole notion of trying to give us a "slice of life" of who lives in these regions is completely wasted. There is a scene where thousands of people sift through a continent of trash and it is very depressing and then they show a young man rapping a song about it. Very odd and offputting to include something like that. That being said visually this movie is great. And it's awesome we get location names but I don't want to HAVE to research every single thing to know what's going on. Because the narration is completely absent on that part. Being confused as to why what they are showing as a "problem" is a problem when it seems to only comes across as another humans daily routine: not everyone can live in plywood castles, some people have to sift through trash to make life work. Leaving viewers clueless doesn't make for a very pleasing viewing experience. Either give us information or don't, don't expect the viewer to do your research. Also if you are expecting this movie to give you any insight into how, specifically, these things you are seeing correlate to the overall catastrophe that is man don't hold your breath. This movie I would have rated higher had their been no narration and had the edit been a little smoother. In its current state it is just confusing visuals.
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10/10
One day we will be gone, and that's a good thing
seanb-457039 June 2022
Seeing what we have done to the earth makes me want humans gone from this planet. We have done enough damage. Time to end the human race experiment through any means. Launch the nukes!
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7/10
hypnotic beauty
SnoopyStyle27 April 2020
The manmade visuals is reminiscent of Manufactured Landscapes (2006) or Koyaanisqatsi (1982) without Philip Glass music. This does talk to the people on the ground and give it more context. I do miss the Philip Glass music. Of course, ML is also made by Jennifer Baichwal. This is more informative which keeps the movie from being repetitive.

The movie starts with a great looking fire and one wonders what is being burnt. It should flash cut to a herd of elephants. That's the move. This does try to lay out broad chapters for the movie but it doesn't really help. The Alicia Vikander narration very much fits the film. The audience gets berated for an hour by a tired Swedish environmentalist. Overall, it has the artificial beauty, sometimes hypnotic, and has a small bit of information.
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6/10
Nice scenes, confusing and unconnected storyline
suripat1 February 2020
The pretentious editing and beautiful pictures work but the story is confusing, wandering from one theme to another without connection. The movie is interesting but not enough.
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2/10
Interesting topic, pretty pictures, but hardly any substance
stevenyc-8631815 November 2022
What an interesting movie this could have been! But instead of teaching us about it, they presented lots of pretty pictures and not much substance. 5 minutes will pass with no dialogue and the camera simply panning in or out. The pictures are beautiful, so if that's your thing, you'll love it. If you want to learn anything about this phenomenon or about habitat or species destruction or adaptation to how humans of changed our planet and environment, then you'll have to look elsewhere. It was a real shame since there is so much to say and show about this topic and it could have been a very edifying experience.
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6/10
Effective in showing its case
bastos12 September 2021
What I got from this doc was that it was just trying to show that we should change the name of the current Geological Epoch from Holocene to Anthropocene, meaning the Human Epoch. I didn't get that it was trying to be an environmental manifesto like some people are claiming. It just wanted to show that humans are the main responsible force behind the current geological changes and, as such, we should change the name of the epoch on which we are currently living. It is well shot but I wasn't blown away by the imagery as I was in other movies like this and therefore it doesn't sweep you over. I can still recommend it as I found the subject matter interesting but don't go in expecting another Koyaanisqatsi or Baraka.
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4/10
Watch Koyaanisqatsi instead
Billybobble124 January 2020
The subject matter for this documentary is very serious, and it should make you angry, I was angry, but at the film not the topic.

It starts at an incredibly slow pace, very little dialogue and the names of the locations seemingly camouflaged into the background and easy to miss. Only 10 minutes in I checked to see what the runtime was, 1hr 26m, that's nothing but boy did I feel this was going to go slowly, and it did.

So to get to why this makes me angry, the narrator sounds half asleep, even sounding like she's given up on life or the planet itself already. Just reeling off depressing numbers about things that may or may not be true, there's just no authority here, and that's the problem.

To paraphrase a quote from the astronaut Edgar Mitchell 'Look at that, you son of a *beehive*.' referring to seeing the planet as a whole for the first time and how precious it is to us. That is the attitude that needs to be adopted.

I care deeply about the health of our planet and this documentary, if anything made me care less. We should be told off, scolded for our lackadaisicalness. Not here. While it can be said some of the imagery tells the story of a thousand words, I only felt that from a few shots and it could have been presented in a much more engaging and informed way. Some of the shots looked pretty, but it was difficult to grasp exactly what I was looking at and indeed the relevance. I'm sure the camera crew enjoyed the task of their busman's holiday jetsetting around the globe to show us the damage idle humans are causing.

The film did give me an audible 'wtf!!!?' moment, I even repeatedly said it aloud to myself, but this was to the discovery of a church in Africa that was built to accommodate one million people!!! That blew my mind, and to see the Africans' unrelenting will to be happy despite horrible jobs and blinkered belief in fairy tales that only assist in the destruction of their lands via their incredible talent to carry things on their heads.

I should have felt ashamed after watching this, embarrassed at what is happening to our planet but mainly I was left slightly awestruck by some of the incredible engineering used to bring about this destruction. Unfortunately I feel this was a very weak effort; the type of person like myself to watch this will gain no new knowledge or understanding, and the type of person who would be less receptive to the hard truths will be so bored there is no way they will watch to conclusion.

If this was made in an attempt to try and open people's eyes to what we have become and the need to learn to apply the brakes and work smarter, great. If this was made to convince the world of science to collectively admit we are at a new epoch.... write a scientific paper!! This was not the latter I feel, far from it.

As said in the heading, the seminal Koyaanisqatsi achieved so much more, with no dialogue and no words on screen. It's 38 years old but equally relevant today as it was then, watch it and ignore this.

As a footnote I would like to say obviously the quote further up did not use the word 'beehive'; this childish obsession with censoring words is analogous to humanity's stupidity to ignore real world problems.
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4/10
Great Scenery! Nothing else though.
MayuMG30 April 2020
-Impressive how they traveled everywhere and captured so much footage.

-If you like looking at videos and pictures of other places for 2 hours, boy is this the movie for you! I get it; it's trying to be deep or whatever, but I can just look at scenery on Youtube. Give me a reason to watch this. -The small narrations that come in every, what feels like, hour just aren't enough to convince me to think this is a good documentary and they aren't informative enough. Why can't you tell me more?
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3/10
Uninteresting propaganda
soundoflight25 February 2021
My take on this film will likely be unpopular, because it goes against the conventional orthodoxy, but I found this film to be boring, misleading, and fundamentally anti-human at its core.

This is the classic case of 'opinion masquerading as facts.' Nothing in this documentary is scientifically sourced. I'm not saying it is all wrong, just that it is not sourced, nor balanced. This "Al Gore" level stuff here. Actually it's worse, because it is mostly images designed to provoke emotional reactions. At least Gore tried to use scientific explanations (they were just wrong, but we aren't supposed to talk about that). Using images without context to provoke emotional reactions is the core definition of what "propaganda" is.

A person could have made the entirely opposite documentary using almost the exact same footage, just changing the ominous music and negative narration to one that celebrates these things as technological achievements of human-kind, and how our ingenuity can get us through these current times, if only we let it.

I do not wish to paper over the fact that there are serious problems on planet earth, serious flaws in our thinking that strives for endless growth, endless consumption, and ever-risking stock markets on finite planet with finite resources. But you will notice that very, very rarely does the finger get pointed at these real root causes. Instead we get documentaries like that that just blame us, and strive make us feel guilty and worthless. That's why I consider this documentary to be "anti-human" at it's core.
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