Reel Earth

Keep up with the ever-changing world with these six captivating documentaries.

Celebrating Earth Day on the couch just got a little more legit, thanks to these six environmental documentaries. Helmed by award-winning directors, each film honors the movers and shakers that are fighting to change the fate of the planet. Their stories are dire, but wonderfully exhilarating on any sized screen.

"Racing Extinction"

James Bond was never this green. From famed photographer Louis Psihoyos director of The Covecomes a behind-the-scenes film about the illegal wildlife trade. It follows OPS, a covert team on a guerrilla-style mission to expose the seedy side of global animal trafficking.

High-tech equipment in hand and getaway driver in tow, OPS builds a testimony of whats happening to disappearing species, such as whale sharks and manta rays. explores the possibility of a sixth mass extinction on Earthone that could be prevented if we band together and beat out time. 

Showing in ; wider release later this year.

"Revolution"

Rob Stewarts documentary was supposed to be about saving sharks. But that changed when Stewart realized that threats to sharks are threats to all living thingshumans included. So instead, he set out to make the case that conservation is really about the preservation of our own race. We have a decision to make, and we dont have much time, he says in the film.  This is no longer just about saving the oceans. Its about saving ourselves.

What Stewarts trying to say is that everyone needs to pitch in, even if it means less dramatic, more delicate work, like advocacy and political campaigns. Its not the typical environmental warriors tale, but that doesnt make it any less important. 

Showing in ; DVD out June 2nd; download on .

"Field Biologist"

Tyler Christensen didnt need a diploma to validate his love for birds; despite not having a college degree, Christensen launched his own ornithological mission in Costa Rica. is the raw biography of this renegade scientistseen through director Jared Fleshers lenswho at 22 already has a glum view of the future. Im a pessimist, he says. I dont think humans are able to get their act together quickly enough to save most of the species in peril.

But Christensen wants to be proven wrong. After all, the odds are in our favor: We are the first species to have the choice of preserving or destroying biodiversity. He leaves his home in New Jersey and settles into the Costa Rican jungle, where he studies migratory songbirds and aims to save the endangered Mangrove Hummingbird. Fighting for the earth requires no credentialsjust the ambition to solve a global crisis, one species at a time.

Download or buy the DVD .

"Emptying the Skies"

Time is running out for the migratory songbirds that fly through Southern Europe every spring, and right into the nets and glue traps of poachers. Jonathan Franzen has been the rallying voice against the deadly practice here in the States, ever since his expos矇 on bird poaching was published in the New Yorker in 2010. Now, , from directors Douglas Kass and Roger Kass, takes Franzens message and turns into a heart-wrenching, 78-minute investigation on the bird hunters of Mediterranean countries like Malta and Cyprus.

The documentary features a group of bird lovers, including Franzen, on a quest to end poaching. Their fight enters dangerous territory as they secretly free trapped birds to save them from the bleak fate of being sold and slaughtered on the black market. The documentary is a call to action, making it clear that its our responsibility to stop the devastation before its too late.

Download on .

"Rara Avis"

In 2010, John James 勛圖窪蹋s Birds of America was auctioned off at $11.5 million as the most expensive book in history. Director Al Reinett takes a look at what made this book so special in , a biographical documentary about 勛圖窪蹋 himself. Featuring his best work and childhood drawings, this film is an intimate look at the Frenchman who made it his lifes work to catalogue the birds of North America.

勛圖窪蹋s diary comes to life in this movie, revealing the mind of a major conservationist. I felt a great desire to make choice of a style more particularly adapted to the imitation of feathers [and] to complete a collection not only valuable to the scientific class, but pleasing to every person, he wrote. Two hundred years later, 勛圖窪蹋s legacy still resounds loud and clear through bird lovers everywhere.

Showing in .

"The Messenger"

Listen carefully: Birds are telling us something about our future, but their message is fading away quickly. Su Rynards documentary unveils the complex effect of disappearing forests on migrating birds. While building windmills and skyscrapers has been great for life in the 21st century, we are inadvertently interfering with these birds ancient rite of passage. The changes in tree-lined landscapes are causing the decline of many songbird speciesespecially the Cerulean Warbler, Purple Martin, and Olive-Sided Flycatcher.

Rynard uses a unique combination of animation and breathtaking cinematography in her film to show that these birds journeys are not only beautiful, but also important to the ecosystems that humans inhabit. You cant just take birds out of the picture and expect the rest of it to keep working, Rynard says in the movie. Thats something we can wholeheartedly agree on.

Set for release this spring.