

One man. Fifty years. Ten trails. Zero butterflies left to count.
Weeping Rocks follows Art, an entomologist nearing the end of his life, who has spent over five decades walking the same ten trails, meticulously counting every butterfly he sees and witnessing the slow erosion of the world. His eccentric, patient research has uncovered patterns of decline that went unnoticed for years, revealing the deep environmental impact of detrimental human activities. As time reshapes the landscape and species fade, Art’s journey becomes a meditation on mortality, change, and the beauty of what remains.
Cinematography
Those decaying trail markers shot like ancient ruins? *Chef's kiss*.
Editing
Fifty years of footage woven into something that breathes.
Direction
Bergs lets silence do the screaming. Smart move.
Director
Kārlis Bergs
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Bergs discovered Art's archive in a condemned university storage unit; most footage was literally molding.
The 'butterfly effect' metaphor here inverts chaos theory—small actions (pesticide, development) create predictable, irreversible collapse.