Environmentalists at Green Visions Potsdam

At the new Green Visions Potsdam film festival of science and culture, longtime Berlinale director Dieter Kosslick focuses on the triad of films, expert discussions, and practical solutions. The second edition of the four-day event will take place at the Filmmuseum Potsdam from May 22 to 25, 2025.

 

The program includes 26 national and international films. The film and science festival will open with the German premiere of Dust to Dust, a portrait of Japanese fashion designer Yuima Nakazato, who is a passionate advocate of ethical and ecological fashion production. The film takes a look at an industry whose glittering world of haute couture has a darker side. In the course of fast fashion production, around 92 million tons of used tons of old clothes end up in a landfill every year.

 

The film How to Poison a Planet, starring actor and environmental activist Mark Ruffalo, tells the story of the fight against PFAS, the forever chemicals that are hazardous to health and the environment. These include the high-performance plastic PTFE, which is used under the trade name "Teflon" to coat pans, among other things. However, the toxic chemicals are also used in food packaging, for impregnating clothing in fire-fighting foams or for paper finishing.

 

The power and political influence of lobbyists is also a topic in The White House Effect by Bonni Cohen, Pedro Kos and Jon Shenk, a documentary about the denial of climate change. Influential industry players began instrumentalizing scientists for their own purposes already decades ago. The film uses archive material to portray and what happened during the era of US President George Bush from 1989 to 1993.

 

“We want to be a showcase for entertainment and a forum for knowledge,” says Dieter Kosslick, “and spread confidence despite the worrying aspects of climate change.” The energy transition, sustainable agriculture, and climate protection on our plate are not simply topics restricted to the big screen. The content of the feature and documentary films is deepened by discussions with scientists, climate activists, and filmmakers from Germany and abroad.

 

The lively exchange in the movie theater continues at the Market for Sustainable Living. At the gates of the Filmmuseum, festival visitors can sample handmade foods and learn more about environmentally friendly products. The spectrum ranges from honey produced by beekeepers and plants cultivated from traditional seeds to energy-efficient concepts for heat.

 

Photos: © Peter Himsel/Green Visions

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