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Wilding Poster

Wilding

The return of nature to a British farm.
2024 | 75m | English

(429 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: David Allen
Writer: Isabella Tree
Staring:
Details

Knepp is a beacon of hope for England’s wildlife. When Isabella and her husband inherited the estate to farm, they recognised how sick the land was. But a groundbreaking radical experiment has been nothing short of transformative. Now it’s a place where mussel-diving pigs, storks and butterflies find sanctuary, and where thriving flora and a vast array of animals have taken back the land. This is a charming, hopeful and necessary story of ecological regeneration.
Release Date: Jun 14, 2024
Director: David Allen
Writer: Isabella Tree
Genres: Documentary
Keywords
Production Companies Passion Pictures, Tangled Bank Studios
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 28, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Isabella Tree Self
Rhiannon Hughes Isabella Tree
Matthew Collyer Self
Name Job
David Allen Director
Tim Cragg Director of Photography
Simon De Glanville Director of Photography
Biggi Hilmars Original Music Composer
Jon Hopkins Original Music Composer
Isabella Tree Book
Name Title
Gaby Bastyra Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

There's something quite fascinating about the recuperative ability of the land to recover from centuries of man's abuse displayed in this documentary. Isabella Tree and husband Charlie have inherited a country estate that can barely manage to grow weeds. The soil is knackered and desperate action is ... required. They hit on the fairly radical idea of abandoning the place to nature (except their front lawn!) and the film now follows the reclamation of this space by birds, bugs, deer, pigs, cattle - creatures that would have roamed the land freely a few hundred years ago. They even bring in storks! It's a stunning piece of photography to look at, but the underlying narrative is really quite weak and I found it allowed sentiment to overrule the one thing it fails to address - scalability. They live in a castle with no evident money worries. None that we are told about, anyway. So this looks like a worthy pet project that though laudable and impressive will, as one of their neighbours raises at a meeting, not feed the nation. When the vast majority of these complementary farming techniques were in use, the population of the UK was probably less than 10% of what it is now; malnutrition and starvation were rife and distribution methods, without refrigeration, left the food supply subject to the vagaries of the weather. What this doesn't address in any way is just how this method of nurturing the land is going to provide for an hungry population. It's largely presented by Isabella Tree herself, and she is an engaging individual but one who presents the most complex of arguments in far too simple a fashion - as if it were a lecture on the relative merits of organic methods without addressing in any way their limitations of their practicalities or economics. "Duncan" the horse and a few of the pigs have some great fun at a charity polo match and it is a very watchable film - but a little too light and fluffy.

Jun 17, 2024