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The Wild

From Friday, August 7th, 2020 to Sunday, September 6th, 2020
Details
USA | 2019 | 65 mins | Documentary
Category
Virtual
Film Type
Documentary
Cost
Free for VTIFF Members $10 general admission $9 seniors (65+) $5 youth

Virtual Ticket

Director
Mark Titus

Free for VTIFF Members, $10 general admission, $9 seniors (65+), $5 youth. 50% of bookings revenue goes to VTIFF. After you’ve booked your ticket you will get an email confirmation with a “Watch Now” button. use that button for when you’re ready to watch. The link will expire August 14 at 11:59pm

Bristol Bay, Alaska, provides more than half of the world’s sockeye salmon. By the end of Mark Titus’ debut feature documentary The Breach, the future looked bright for the salmon habitat in Alaska’s pristine Bristol Bay. The film depicted how local opposition had seemingly thwarted the proposed Pebble Mine project, which would have placed North America’s largest open-pit copper mine in the bay’s headwaters. Fast-forward three years and the picture looks very different, with a mining-friendly administration in the White House and a new emphasis on rolling back environmental regulations. Titus felt compelled to follow up with The Wild, which focuses on the rapid erosion of hard-won safeguards that has revived efforts to build the Pebble Mine in the most pristine salmon habitat on the continent. Rather than focus solely on the fish themselves, Titus emphasizes the impact on the community, which relies on healthy sockeye-salmon runs to make a living in Bristol Bay. They include the operator of the area’s Bear Trail Lodge, a net-setter on the Nushagak River, the captain of a commercial fishing vessel, leaders of the Indigenous First Nations, and a family-owned fish-processing business. As The Wild demonstrates, the story of salmon is as much about a human way of life and the Northwest’s cultural heritage as about protecting a vital food source. Inside of all this is Titus’ own intensely personal story of recovery, which intersects squarely with the film’s central question: How do you save what you love? In order to answer it, Titus reaches out to a larger community, including Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard, Seattle chef Tom Douglas, Yupik artist Apayu’q Moore, and actor Mark Harmon.

Read the New York Times about new developments HERE

Director Biography
A fishing guide as well as a filmmaker, Seattle-based Mark Titus studied acting and directing at the University of Oregon and Vancouver Film School. In 2004, his script, Tsonoquo (The Wild Woman), won the Washington State Screenplay Competition, and the shorts he’s produced have screened at over 25 film festivals worldwide. He is the founder of Seattle’s August Island Pictures, and has written and directed brand films for Amazon, Microsoft, The Nature Conservancy, T-Mobile, and other clients.

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