One Earth Film Festival
FREP is pleased to have joined with our co-sponsors to participate in
One Earth Film Festival since 2017.
One Earth Film Festival (OEFF) is the Midwest’s premier environmental film festival, creating opportunities for understanding climate change, sustainability and the power of human involvement. They showcase top-issue, thought-provoking environmental films and lead audiences in interactive post-film discussions focused on solutions. One Earth Film Festival is a production of One Earth Collective, an organization out of Oak Park, IL and is held each March.
April 17-23, 2024
Once again, FREP joins with our Fox Watershed Partners to sponsor this environmental film festival
This year we are sponsoring a virtual screening of the film Carbon: The Unauthorized Biography
This year we are sponsoring a virtual screening of the film Carbon: The Unauthorized Biography
The virtual screening will be Tuesday, April 23, 2024 at 6:00 PM
Link for more Info and tickets: Festival Info & Tickets
Link for more Info and tickets: Festival Info & Tickets
We are also promoting the April 21 screenings in-person screenings of Common Ground,
Our 2023 Screening Co-Sponsors
Click on logos below for link to the co-sponsor's websites
Our Past Screenings
Our 2023 film:
Going Circular
Going Circular
Thank you to all who participated in the screening on Thursday, March 9, 2023
as part of the One Earth Film Festival
as part of the One Earth Film Festival
Going Circular is a full-length documentary. From the globe-spanning patterns of ocean currents to the microscopic
cycles of a living cell, our planet sustains balance through
circularity. Scientists, inventors, economists, and designers are
increasingly finding that nature’s most fundamental rules of the
biosphere may just be the solution to humanity’s collision course with
the technosphere.
Screening at our Venue Sponsor
Waubonsee Community College
Aurora Downtown Campus
18 S. River Street, Aurora, IL 60506
The screening is free, with a suggested donation of $8 to OEFF
Thank you to all who participated in this screening
on Saturday, March 12, 2022.
Our 2022 Film
Inhabitants follows five Native
American Tribes as they restore their relationships to the land using
ancient practices that nurture life. For millennia Native Americans
stewarded and shaped their landscapes, but centuries of colonization
have disrupted their ability to maintain traditional land management
practices. From deserts, coastlines, forests, mountains and prairies,
Native communities are restoring their ancient relationships with the
land. As the climate crisis escalates, these time-tested practices of
North America's original inhabitants are becoming increasingly essential
in a rapidly changing world.
Our 2021 Film
Kiss the Ground
Kiss the Ground
Saturday, March 13, 2021
Links related to the film & post-discussion:
Urban Growers Collective - Chicago
LINK to the film screening Q&A on 3/13/21
LINKS:
One Earth Film Festival
One Earth Collective
Listed below are the films screened in past years, and links to websites and other resources featured in the films
One Earth Film Festival
One Earth Collective
Listed below are the films screened in past years, and links to websites and other resources featured in the films
Co-Sponsors of the Screenings
Fox River Ecosystem Partnership, The Conservation Foundation, Sierra Club - Valley of the Fox Chapter, Fox River Study Group, Friends of the Fox River, Kane-DuPage Soil & Water Conservation District., Clean Water for Kane - Kane County Dept. of Environmental and Water Resources, Hey and Associates, Applied Ecological Services
Venue Host
Our thanks to Waubonsee Community College, Aurora Downtown Campus for hosting the screenings the past four years. With 2021 being virtual, we hope 2022 will allow us to return to our in-person venue.
Our thanks to Waubonsee Community College, Aurora Downtown Campus for hosting the screenings the past four years. With 2021 being virtual, we hope 2022 will allow us to return to our in-person venue.
Resources related to Kiss the Ground
Regenerative Agriculture Webinar presented March 4, 2021
Featuring: Dave Brandt, Walnut Creek LLC; Kevin Kelley, Terra Vitae Farms;
Dr. Emily Heaton, Professor of Regenerative Ag. and Extension Specialist, University of Illinois
Presented by: Soil & Water Conservation Districts, Chicago Wilderness, Illinois Extension
Webinar Recording
Featuring: Dave Brandt, Walnut Creek LLC; Kevin Kelley, Terra Vitae Farms;
Dr. Emily Heaton, Professor of Regenerative Ag. and Extension Specialist, University of Illinois
Presented by: Soil & Water Conservation Districts, Chicago Wilderness, Illinois Extension
Webinar Recording
March 9, 2020 The Need to Grow
In a race against the end of farmable soil, three individuals fight for change in the industry of agricultural food production, calling for a revolution. "The Need to GROW" delivers alarming evidence on the importance of healthy soil — revealing not only the potential of localized food production working with nature, but our opportunity as individuals to help regenerate our planet’s dying soils and participate in the restoration of the Earth.
FREP has 2 copies of the film and we are happy to make it available to small groups or individuals who would like to view it. Please contact Becky Hoag at 630-482-9157
March 4, 2019 The Human Element
Renowned photographer James Balog (prominently featured in “Chasing Ice”) uses his camera to reveal how environmental change is affecting the lives of everyday Americans. Following the four classical elements—air, earth, fire and water—to frame his journey, Balog explores wildfires, hurricanes, sea level rise, coal mining, and the changes in the air we breathe. He takes it further by examining the effects of the fifth element—the human element—to tell an urgent story while giving inspiration for a more balanced relationship between humanity and nature. We were honored to hold a Skype session with James Balog at the end of the screening.
The Human Element Website & Trailer
The Human Element Website & Trailer
March 5, 2018 Rancher Farmer Fisherman
What values do rural and urban people have in common? What are the challenges we can solve together? Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman tells the inspiring story of heartland conservation heroes who are feeding the world while stewarding the land and water. One of the darlings of last year’s Sundance Film Festival, the film celebrates the agricultural entrepreneurs who are doing things like revolutionizing industrial scale agriculture to rebuild the fertility, biodiversity and resilience of soil.
This gorgeous film with abundant visual appeal is directed by Oscar nominee and Emmy winner Susan Froemke and Emmy winner John Hoffman, and narrated by journalist Tom Brokaw.
March 6, 2017 Hometown Habit
This film focuses on educating about how and why native plants are critical to the survival and vitality of local ecosystems with a goal to inspire people to plant native plants, providing a call to action to change our garden choices to include native plants. We were honored to have the filmmaker/directo Catherine Zimmerman join us for the screening. Following are helpful links for learning more about the film and the topics discussed in it.
Faith In Place (sponsor of OEFF)
Sacred Ground (featured in the film, program of National Wildlife Federation)
Sacred Ground (featured in the film, program of National Wildlife Federation)