CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.1/10
35 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Apasionado por la vida marina, un cineasta se propone documentar el daño que los humanos hacen a las especies marinas y descubre una alarmante corrupción global.Apasionado por la vida marina, un cineasta se propone documentar el daño que los humanos hacen a las especies marinas y descubre una alarmante corrupción global.Apasionado por la vida marina, un cineasta se propone documentar el daño que los humanos hacen a las especies marinas y descubre una alarmante corrupción global.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Callum Roberts
- Self - Marine Scientist, Oceanographer, Author
- (as Prof. Callum Roberts)
Peter Hammarstedt
- Self - Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
- (as Captain Peter Hammarstedt)
Chris Langdon
- Self - Marine Biologist & Ecologist at the University of Miami
- (as Prof. Chris Langdon)
Sylvia Earle
- Self - Marine Biologist, Oceanographer, Explorer
- (as Dr. Sylvia Earle)
Paul Watson
- Self - Founder of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
- (as Captain Paul Watson)
Opiniones destacadas
This is a scary documentary for a mix of different reasons.
It's informative and shocking. The statistics that it gives really make you gasp.
You can tell that this film maker really does have a passion for this subject.
It's heartbreaking but not really in a way that will make you cry. More in a way that you will be in complete shock and disbelief. At the people who can do things like this.
I think the biggest issue I had with the movie is it is trying to fit an insane about of subjects into a documentary that runtime is an hour and twenty nine minutes. It's shoves much in that it has to constantly topic hop. I think it's interesting in a way because it shows how it is all connected but it can just make you feel a little bit untethered to the films I thought.
Other than that I think it was great and eye opening.
It's informative and shocking. The statistics that it gives really make you gasp.
You can tell that this film maker really does have a passion for this subject.
It's heartbreaking but not really in a way that will make you cry. More in a way that you will be in complete shock and disbelief. At the people who can do things like this.
I think the biggest issue I had with the movie is it is trying to fit an insane about of subjects into a documentary that runtime is an hour and twenty nine minutes. It's shoves much in that it has to constantly topic hop. I think it's interesting in a way because it shows how it is all connected but it can just make you feel a little bit untethered to the films I thought.
Other than that I think it was great and eye opening.
This is a definite eye opener that will not be easy to digest. If you focus on the information being presented and not the filmmaking, then the film gets the job done. I thought some of the graphics and editing choices (especially the animated re-enactments) cheapened the overall feel.
Aside from that, this is another crucial viewing along with the producers other films 'Cowspiracy' and 'What The Health'. We're living in critical times when the consequences of our food choices no longer go unnoticed. You can make a difference simply by what you choose and choose not to eat each and every day.
Aside from that, this is another crucial viewing along with the producers other films 'Cowspiracy' and 'What The Health'. We're living in critical times when the consequences of our food choices no longer go unnoticed. You can make a difference simply by what you choose and choose not to eat each and every day.
....money talks, just like in the film. If you can seriously eat fish without trying to moderate your consumption after watching this documentary, then you have no heart.
You may not eat fish again if you watch this passionate Netflix documentary, Seaspiracy, about global corruption, from destroying marine life with plastic garbage to slaughtering whales and dolphins using slave labor. I may exaggerate my tone as director/narrator Ali Tabrizi too often does, but if there is just a small portion of truth here, you best pay attention to see what you can do about our seas.
Perhaps the most depressing disclosure is the destruction of marine life and habitats by the growing amount of plastic, which can accumulate in square miles like colonies, seemingly indestructible fake food for unknowing fish like dolphins and whales who ingest without the ability to expunge. To see creatures entangled in monstrous nets as collateral damage is to weep for our inability to stop the imprisonment.
As Tabrizi gets closer to Asia, Japan's wanton fishing of sharks for their fins leaves a numbing feeling of waste and cruelty. But crueler still is Thailand's supposed sustainable Grind, an occasional herding of whales resulting in a blood red harbor of death.
Yet the bad that men can do is evident as young men corral fish while these youths are themselves enslaved by ruthless employers. Maybe more depressing is Tabrizi's disclosure that non-profit organizations can be more corrupt than whalers.
With that human flourish, Tabrizi's 90 min doc makes his point about the universal corruption of humanity and the need to preserve the seas, which need all sizes of fish to sustain itself. Typically, Tabrizi is in hyper mode, but I doubt few of us will give up fish in our diet. His answer to curbing the global exploitation of seas and men can, however, spur us on to better, more humane practices.
If seafood disappears, according to a study, by 2048, then most of us will not have to worry. Except for our grandkids, hmmm. I may stop eating fish right now.
Perhaps the most depressing disclosure is the destruction of marine life and habitats by the growing amount of plastic, which can accumulate in square miles like colonies, seemingly indestructible fake food for unknowing fish like dolphins and whales who ingest without the ability to expunge. To see creatures entangled in monstrous nets as collateral damage is to weep for our inability to stop the imprisonment.
As Tabrizi gets closer to Asia, Japan's wanton fishing of sharks for their fins leaves a numbing feeling of waste and cruelty. But crueler still is Thailand's supposed sustainable Grind, an occasional herding of whales resulting in a blood red harbor of death.
Yet the bad that men can do is evident as young men corral fish while these youths are themselves enslaved by ruthless employers. Maybe more depressing is Tabrizi's disclosure that non-profit organizations can be more corrupt than whalers.
With that human flourish, Tabrizi's 90 min doc makes his point about the universal corruption of humanity and the need to preserve the seas, which need all sizes of fish to sustain itself. Typically, Tabrizi is in hyper mode, but I doubt few of us will give up fish in our diet. His answer to curbing the global exploitation of seas and men can, however, spur us on to better, more humane practices.
If seafood disappears, according to a study, by 2048, then most of us will not have to worry. Except for our grandkids, hmmm. I may stop eating fish right now.
Was surprised by the role of non-profits in this horrendous sea fishing crime. All areas of our lives seem to be riddled by the same issues of greed and fraud
¿Sabías que…?
- ConexionesFeatured in Subject (2022)
- Bandas sonorasSleeping Giant
Written by Jon Thor Birgisson and Alex Somers
Performed by Jon Thor Birgisson and Alex Somers
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- How long is Seaspiracy?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 29 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
What was the official certification given to Seaspiracy: La pesca insostenible (2021) in Canada?
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