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Shores of Silence - Whale sharks in India
Winner of
the Worlds most Prestigious Award the GREEN
OSCAR / PANDA AWARD at the Wildscreen
Festival, in Bristol, UK in 2000 and winner of
numerous other national and international
awards.
Shores of Silence
is the first Indian film to focus on a large
marine species. This is the first ever
documentation of the massacre of whale sharks
on the Indian coast.
The film is an
effort to create awareness and gather support
to protect and conserve this species. The aim
is to eventually help create policies to ban
whale shark trade in India and find
sustainable alternatives for the local fishing
community.
This film moved
the government of India into bringing in
legislation and banning the killing of the
Whale Sharks on Indian shores. The Whale Shark
was declared protected under the Indian
Wildlife Act- 1972, bringing it at par with
the tigers and the Rhino.
This was a
landmark move. It was the first marine species
to be protected under the Indian law.
In November 2002,
at the international CITES meet in Chile,
Santiago, a negative voting changed into an
overwhelming positive after this film was
shown to the delegates - bringing global
protection of the Whale Shark and giving the
largest fish in the world a new lease of life.
The Film has also
been successful in bringing about change in
the attitude of fisher folk.

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The Last
Migration - Wild Elephant Capture In Sarguja
This film was the first
Asian film to win the world’s most prestigious award
– The Green Oscar - Panda Award at the Wildscreen,
1994. It subsequently went on to win seven other
international awards.
The
Last Migration depicts a 42-day wild elephant
capture operation in Madhya Pradesh, India.
Driven out of their home range in Bihar, due to
excessive deforestation; a herd of wild elephants
migrated to eastern Madhya Pradesh 300 kms away;
where the sterile teak plantations, devoid of
diversity, could not sustain the herd. Desperate for
sustenance they went on a rampage and created havoc
amidst the terrified tribals of the remote district
of Sarguja – where elephants in the wild have been
unheard of, for more than a century. Since 1988, 45
people had been killed by the herd and unabated
devastation of their fields and homes left the
villages bereft of their livelihood. The herd was
finally captured in 1993.
The
film portrays the man-animal conflict and its
repercussions; the tussle between the ancient
pachyderm and the tribals of the forest, which is a
manifestation of a deeper and more vicious cycle;
the disruption of the balance in Nature, on which
rests the harmony of existence - the devastation of
this critical framework, by mankind's relentless and
unsustainable obsession with power and development.
Last Migration
led to the establishment of Elephant
Foundation-India

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Vanishing Giants
Winner of the
Panda or Green Oscar Award at Wildscreen 2004.
The
brutal capture, torture and subsequent death of a
young tusker in a capture operation authorized by
the government prompted Mike Pandey to stop filming
his documentary on ‘Elephants in Crisis’ and turn it
into a news feature.
This
news feature exposes the cruel and archaic methods
of capture being used with no concern for the
animal, a protected and endangered species.
The
news feature is a protest and demand for immediate
cessation of capture of elephants in this brutal way
and a call for policy changes if elephants are to be
protected.
Within 3 days of the release of this news feature
the Government of India suspended all capture of
wild elephants. Individuals in charge of the botched
capture operation were suspended.
The
news created international outrage International
news agencies picked it and activists from all over
the world joined in triggering a global signature
campaign.
In India changes in
policies and rules were made at a national level
ensuring that all future captures take place with
modern facilities and in the presence of experts to
avoid trauma and cruelty after capture. Elephant
welfare became top priority.

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Khullam Khulla
Khullam Khulla is a
“fun-learning” Children’s series designed for
children in the 4 to 9 age group. The idea is to
motivate and sensitize the child. Each episode is
value based and revolves around a concept and a
specific subject in Science and Nature.
A
26 episode programme comprising of colourful puppet
characters, live footage, animations, graphics and
music, Khullum Khulla aims to familiarizes the child
with alphabets of the Hindi language and enhance the
child’s knowledge of the natural world. The
programming is designed to make children want to
learn.
Khullam Khulla captures a child’s limitless
imagination and attention span, the lessons taught
are easily absorbed and leave a deep impact on a
child’s mind.
“No one would have
thought that learning could ever be fun, imagine
being able to learn to read and count while you play
or learning the alphabet through interesting stories
and discovering the world as you sing… This is all
possible here in Khullam Khulla”
- Amitabh Bachchan
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Earth Matters
Earth Matters is a
series produced by Riverbank Studios for Doordarshan,
India’s National Television Network.
The
series takes a hard look at the environment in the
country. Pollution in urban area, pressures on rural
India, the stress on natural resources, the impact
of unthinking human development on India’s wildlife
and forests.
Earth
Matters does this not by blaming the government or
any one faction for India’s environmental troubles
rather the programme’s philosophy is based on
alerting the individual, examining his/her part in
the concerned issue and in forming part of the
solution.
The
series is anchored by wildlife filmmaker Mike Pandey
and his colleague Shibani Chaudhury.
Broadcast in both English and Hindi, it is extremely
relevant to millions of viewers in India and other
countries in the region. The series has received an
overwhelming response from remote villages in far
flung corners of India as well as from viewers as
far off as Saudi Arabia and North Africa.
International Awards
Received
Earth
Matters has won four prestigious International
Awards.
1.
'Shores of Silence - whale sharks in India' won The
Commonwealth Broadcasting Association Award, U.K., -
2002
2.
'Global Warming' won the Best Magazine programme
Award at 18th International Television Science
Awards, Paris - 2001
3. 'Noise pollution' won
the Chinese award.4.'Oceans' won the Portugal Film
Festival – 2001

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Honey
Hunter Of The Blue Mountains
One of the last havens
of untouched forest land – the Nilgiri Biosphere
Reserve in south India is home to the deadly rock
bee the Apis Dorsata. Just before the monsoon, the
honey gatherers, Kurumba tribals of the Nilgiris
prepare for their yearly harvest of honey, scaling
precipitous cliffs to collect the treasure of the
wild Apis Dorsata.
Dramatic sequences of honey gathering off 300 foot
cliffs leave you spellbound by their agility and
fearlessness.
The
collector spiders down the sheer cliffs supported by
a ladder woven out of forest vine.
As
filmmakers our biggest challenge was to capture this
sequence effectively, since the kurumbas would not
permit outsiders to suspend themselves on their
chosen cliffs. The only way to get extraordinary
angles was to climb atop and reach over the edge of
the cliffs or position ourselves directly below the
hives. Rigorous, as each time we were right in the
midst of the bee storm.
The first film to have
documented their way of living ‘Honey Hunters Of The
Blue Mountains’ was very well received at the
International Bee Keeping Conference Api Mondia in
Vancouver, Canada in November 1999.

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Kalpavriksha – Legacy Of Forests
A Film on Medicinal Plants, Indigenous People and
Traditional Medicines
This film traces
the evolution and discovery of medicinal plants and
tribal wisdom in India to show how historically and
culturally they have been an integral part of India.
About
80% of the developing world still relies on age-old
medicinal practices based on the curative properties
of plants found in the area.
Today, the modern world is moving towards these
traditional practices creating a phenomenal demand
for medicinal plants. Strangely, the bulk of the
plants traded are gathered from ‘wild’ forest
sources - very few species are cultivated. This
created a major stress on natural resources – some
Himalayan species are already close to extinction
due to this dangerous trend.
India
is one of the richest bio-diversity hotspots in the
world, supporting over 45,000 species of plants both
agricultural and medicinal.
The film explores and
brings out the essence of the interdependence and
way of living of tribal communities that have since
time immemorial depended on the forest for all their
needs, including healing purposes. It looks into the
philosophy of traditional medicinal practices and
discusses what further steps and measures are
required to conserve and protect the medicinal
heritage that is ours.

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The
Living Fossil – Indian Horseshoe Crab
Driving along the Indian
coastline in August 1996, we stumbled into the
little known habit of the Indian Horseshoe Crab.
Fascinated by this creature, we decided to delve
into its story and the film “The Living Fossil” took
form.
Unchanged for 350 million years, the Indian
Horseshoe Crab is one of the oldest living creatures
on earth. Today this species is in valuable to
medical research.
In
India, research on the horseshoe crab and possible
commercial exploitation is guided by a group of
Indian scientists, committed to the conservation of
the crabs. This team of scientists working out of a
tiny field laboratory in a small town on India’s
east coast, has also successfully bred Horseshoe
crabs in laboratory conditions.
This film is one of the
few success stories with happy endings that one can
find in the natural world today. Despite its immense
commercial value the Indian Horseshoe crab is in
safe hands, so far.

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Shores Of Silence –
Whale Sharks In India
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The
Green Oscar / Panda Award, Wildscreen Festival,
Bristol, UK
National Award for Best Science & Adventure Film,
Mumbai 2005 |
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Citta Di Torino At The Cinemambiente Awards
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6TH Sichuan Tv Festival China |
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Golden Jury Award Worldfest 2002, Houston
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The Honour of Knowledge Award at Baristlava,
Slovakia-2001 |
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The Rolls Royce, Commonwealth Broadcasting Award,
UK-2002 |
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Ministry of environment of the Czech Republic award,
2002 |
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ecofilm award in the category of documentary, 2002 |
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Ministry of the Environment of the Czech Republic
Award, Nov 2002 |
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Wildlife trust of India, Endangered Species Award,
2002 |

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The Last
Migration - Wild Elephant Capture At Sarguja
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The Green Oscar – First Asian to win the Green Oscar
/ Panda Award,
Wildscreen Festival, Bristol, UK |
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Spirit Of Wilderness, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA |
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Care For Nature Award, International World Wildlife
Fund,
Bangalore, India. |
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Jury Special Prize, I.V. Festival, Trivandrum. |
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We The People, South Africa. |

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Vanishing Giants
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The
Green Oscar, Wildscreen Panda Award, for the Third
time |
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Earth matters
Whale Sharks in
Distress (Earth matters)
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Commonwealth Broadcasting Association Award in
England 2002 |
Global Warming (Earth
Matters)
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Best Magazine programme Award at 18th International
Television Science Awards at Paris – 2001 |
Noise pollution
(Earth Matters)
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The 6th Sichuan TV Festival Award – China, 2001 |
Oceans (Earth
Matters)
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The Portugal Film Festival - 2001Food
For Tomorrow |
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Fertiliser Association Of India Award. |

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Honey Hunters Of the
Blue Mountains
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Mayor of Prague Award At International FAAF, Prague |
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Second Prize, Earth Vision , Santacruze, Usa |
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Festival International du Film Animalier Albert Mars
2001 |

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Kalpavriksha – Legacy
of Forests
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Vatavaran 2003, Silver Tree Award in the category of
Natural Resource Conservation |

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The
Living Fossil – Indian Horseshoe Crab
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Indian Documentary Producers Award (IDPA),
Special Jury Award - 2002 |

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CMS UNEP Award
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First filmmaker to be awarded the prestigious CMS
UNEP Award for Outstanding Achievement in
Global Conservation, the Prithvi Ratan at
the Vatavaran Film Festival in November 2003. |
Harvesting The Mountains
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A&M Award For Creative Excellence, India. |
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Fertiliser Association Of India Award. |
Beyond The Green
Revolution
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Fertiliser Association Of India Award. |
Pushkar Rendezvous
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Best Tourist Film, Milan, Italy. |
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Best Information Film, Melbourne, Australia. |
Asiad ‘82 National
Award
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Gold Medal For Photography |
The Natural History
Of The Cheetah
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The Duke Of Edinburgh Award, Gold Medal For
Wildlife, UK |
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