Title | #SOS SAVE OUR SENTINELS |
Brand | JIMMY NELSON FOUNDATION |
Product / Service | UNITED NATIONS WORLD DAY FOR CULTURAL DIVERSITY |
Category | A07. Not-for-profit / Charity / Government |
Entrant | WUNDERMAN THOMPSON Mumbai , INDIA |
Idea Creation | WUNDERMAN THOMPSON Mumbai, INDIA |
Production | SMALL FRY PRODUCTIONS Mumbai, INDIA |
Post Production | SMALL FRY PRODUCTIONS Mumbai, INDIA |
Post Production 2 | Wah Wah Music Mumbai, INDIA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Senthil Kumar | Wunderman Thompson India | Chief Creative Officer |
Jimmy Nelson | Jimmy Nelson Foundation | Photographer |
Ryan Suares | Small Fry Productions | Executive Producer |
Dhruv Ghanekar | Wah Wah Music | Music Artist |
Priyank Premkumar | Freelancer | Editor |
Kevin Menezes | Wunderman Thompson India | Editor |
Dev Nayak | After Studios | Editor |
Celebrate nature’s last watchmen standing still. The last sentinels of our natural reserves standing still in spite of human progress, read as human greed, standing still to protect their family trees and forests from land grabbers, fossil fuel exploiters and mining corporations standing still as the sentinels of mother earth in the wake of climate change, standing still as water rises and volcanoes breathe standing still as forest fires rage and clouds dance standing still as rainbows disappear into the rain standing still as an endangered tribe in their own ancient habitats standing still in spite of the threat of extinction of their identity. The guardians of ancient culture. The guardians of our future. The children of Mother Nature. Standing still in a series of still photographs. Blink. And They’re Gone. -------------------------------- #SOS SAVE OUR SENTINELS Released on the United Nations World Day for Cultural Diversity.
Save Our Sentinels is a powerful visual commentary on the cultural identity of the last sentinels of our natural reserves, the last 36 indigenous tribes standing still, in rare still photographs. Stitched together from thousands of original documented photographs of the last few indigenous tribes interspersed with the rarest footage of their ancient habitats. The celebration of the indigenous builds from life lessons to life threatening moments revealing that the indigenous people are an endangered tribe in their own ancient habitats. The film celebrates the last few indigenous tribes for standing still in spite of the threat to their cultural identity and their own forest lands. Blink. And They’re Gone. Indigenous Sound Design: The soundtrack is a multilingual musical expression with lyrics from ancient tribal sayings and forgotten folk songs recorded on location from the indigenous tribes featured in the film from Africa, Australia, India, Siberia and South America.
Website URL | Supporting Webpage | Supporting Webpage