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Playlist 'Nature & Wildlife Spring Lineup 2019'

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  • Blind Monkey, The
    Blind Monkey, The
    1 x 60'
  • Born In The Wild
    Born In The Wild
    4 x 60'
  • British Garden: Life And Death On Your Lawn
    British Garden: Life...
    1 x 89'
  • China's Swan Lake
    China's Swan Lake
    1 x 60'
  • Epic Safari Encounters
    Epic Safari...
    26 x 30'
  • Fearless Mr Fox
    Fearless Mr Fox
    1 x 60'
  • Kanga Pan: An African Horror Story
    Kanga Pan: An...
    1 x 60'
  • Rottnest Island: Kingdom Of The Quokka
    Rottnest Island:...
    2 x 60'
  • Secret Life Of Baby Owls, The
    Secret Life Of Baby...
    2 x 60'
  • Sixteen Legs
    Sixteen Legs
    2 x 60'
  • Spider House
    Spider House
    1 x 89'
  • Upside Down Tree, The
    Upside Down Tree,...
    1 x 60'
  • Nigel Marven's Wild Central America
    Nigel Marven's Wild...
    4 x 60'
  • Wildlife, The
    Wildlife, The
    16 x 30'
  • Wild Warrior Encounters
    Wild Warrior...
    6 x 30'
  • Woman Who Loves Giraffes, The
    Woman Who Loves...
    1 x 60'
  • Wonder Of Dogs, The
    Wonder Of Dogs, The
    3 x 60'
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Woman Who Loves Giraffes, The
Woman Who Loves Giraffes, The 1 x 60' or 1 x 83'
In 1956, four years before Jane Goodall ventured into the world of chimpanzees and seven years before Dian Fossey left to work with mountain gorillas, in fact, before anyone, man or woman had made such a trip, 23-year-old Canadian biologist, Anne Innis Dagg, made an unprecedented solo journey to South Africa to become the first person in the world to study animal behaviour in the wild on that continent. When she returned home a year later armed with ground-breaking research, the insurmountable barriers she faced as a female scientist proved much harder to overcome. In 1972, having published 20 research papers as an assistant professor of zoology at University of Guelph, the Dean of the university, denied her tenure. She couldn’t apply to the University of Waterloo because the Dean there told Anne that he would never give tenure to a married woman. This was the catalyst that transformed Anne into a feminist activist. For three decades, Anne Innis Dagg was absent from the giraffe world until 2010 when she was sought out by giraffologists and not just brought back to into the fold, but finally celebrated for her work.

In The Woman Who Loves Giraffes, an older (now 85), wiser Anne takes us on her first expedition back to Africa to retrace where her trail-blazing journey began more than half a century ago. By retracing her original steps, and with letters and stunning, original 16mm film footage, Anne offers an intimate window into her life as a young woman, juxtaposed with a first hand look at the devastating reality that giraffes are facing today. Both the world’s first ‘giraffologist’, whose research findings ultimately became the foundation for many scientists following in her footsteps, and the species she loves have each experienced triumphs as well as nasty battle scars. The Woman Who Loves Giraffes gives us a moving perspective on both.

Duration

1 x 60' , 1 x 83'

Awards

Sonoma International Film Festival 2019 - Winner - Best Feature Documentary and the Audience Award (Best Documentary).

Production Company

Free Spirit Films

Definition

HD

YOP

2019

Production Company
Free Spirit Films
Definition
HD
YOP
2019
Tags
French

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