Louie Psihoyos’ The Cove
Nate von Zumwalt, Editorial Coordinator
In this eco-conscious age of hybrid vehicles, carbon-cutting cleaning products, and urban composting, Earth Day appears to have ascended the holiday hierarchy—to heights that perhaps even the crunchiest of its 1970’s creators couldn’t have envisioned. This Monday, April 22, marks the 43rd Earth Day, and Sundance Institute’s #ArtistServices program is currently offering some special documentaries for home viewing that confront vastly different (but equally alarming) stories addressing urgent threats to the environment. To observe Earth Day this year, we’re offering hand-picked selection of sustainability-themed Sundance favorites for you to enjoy.
Don’t have time to watch them all now? No problem. You can queue them up for later using GoWatchIt and you’ll never miss a beat.
Atomic States of America
 Currently available through #ArtistServices. Watch Now 
In 2010, the United States approved the first new nuclear power plant in 32 years, heralding a “Nuclear Renaissance”. But that was before the Fukushima accident in Japan renewed a fierce public debate over the safety and viability of nuclear power.
The Atomic States of America journeys to nuclear reactor communities around the country to provide a comprehensive exploration of the history and impact to date of nuclear power, and to investigate the truths and myths about nuclear energy.
Ecological Design
 Currently available through  #ArtistServices. Watch  Now
Ecological Design: Inventing the Future is a educational documentary film which illuminates the emergence of ecological design in the 20th Century. The film features the ideas and prototypes of pioneering designers who have trail-blazed the development of sustainable architecture, cities, energy systems, transport, and industry. Beginning in the 1920’s with the work of R. Buckminster Fuller, moving through the 1960’s and the Counter-Culture and ending on the doorstep of the 21st Century: the film follows the evolution of Ecological Design from the Visions of a few independent thinkers to the powerful movement it is becoming.
An Inconvenient Truth
 Arguably the most influential environmental documentary of our time, Davis  Guggenheim’s 2006 Sundance Film Festival selection and Academy Award winner is  credited with educating the public about climate change and spawning the larger  global warming movement.
Clear  Cut: The Story of Philomath, Oregon
 Director  Peter Richardson has crafted a seamless portrait of a clash of differing  values. The film explores the story of the Clemens, a logging family in Oregon,  while serving as a microcosm for the vast ideological divisions within our  country.
Chasing Ice
 Director Jeff Orlowski tracks photographer James Balog’s efforts to gather  visual evidence of the Earth’s melting glaciers with time-lapse photography in  this breathtaking documentary.
Crude
 The story behind the  world’s largest oil-related environmental lawsuit comes to the screen as  award-winning documentary filmmaker Joe Berlinger investigates the facts in the  case of the so-called “Amazon Chernobyl,” a disaster that occurred  deep in the rain forests of Ecuador.
If A  Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front
 Filmmaker Marshall Curry explores the  inner workings of the Earth Liberation Front, a revolutionary movement devoted  to crippling facilities involved in deforestation, while simultaneously  offering a profile of Oregon ELF member Daniel McGowan, who was brought up on  terrorism charges for his involvement with the radical group.
Semper  Fi: Always Faithful
 In  this Academy Award nominated documentary from Rachel Libert shows the two  retired Marines that lead the fight for justice for U.S. soldiers exposed to  dangerous toxic chemicals while stationed at Camp Lejeune Marine Corps Base in  North Carolina.
The  Cove 
 Louie Psihoyos’ 2010 Academy Award winning documentary  analyzes and questions Japan’s dolphin hunting culture. The final result is a  heart-wrenching, but inspirational story that shows the true power of film in  the hands of people who aren’t afraid to risk everything for a vital cause.
The  Island President 
 Documentary filmmaker Jon Shenk  follows President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives during his first year in  office, as he wages a valiant campaign to raise awareness of global climate  change in order to save his beloved island country, which is slowly being  swallowed up by the ocean due to rising sea levels.
Trouble the Water 
 Tia Lessin and Carl Deal’s Grand Jury Prize-winning documentary expertly weaves  home video, news broadcasts, and original footage to rewrite the coverage of  Hurricane Katrina through the experiences of a New Orleans couple.
 
								 
															 
															 
															 
															

