

A 54-minute gut punch that'll make you side-eye every wooden table you own.
Documentary film on the plight of Western Australia's forests and their real value in drawing down and storing carbon.
Cinematography
Drone shots that make destruction look almost beautiful. Cruel trick.
Direction
Jane Hammond lets silence do the screaming.
Score
Kelton Pell's narration hits like ancestral memory.
Director
Jane Hammond
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
WA's jarrah forests are among the world's most carbon-dense; clearcutting them releases more emissions than Australia's entire coal fleet. The film exposes how 'sustainable' logging licenses ignore this math entirely.
Kelton Pell, a Yamatji man, was deliberately cast to center Indigenous voices typically excluded from environmental docs—a choice that reshapes whose grief the film carries.
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