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If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front

  • 2011
  • Unrated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (2011)
A rare behind-the-curtain look at the Earth Liberation Front, the radical environmental group that the FBI calls America's 'number one domestic terrorist threat.'
Play trailer2:09
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A rare behind-the-curtain look at the Earth Liberation Front, the radical environmental group that the FBI calls America's 'number one domestic terrorist threat.'A rare behind-the-curtain look at the Earth Liberation Front, the radical environmental group that the FBI calls America's 'number one domestic terrorist threat.'A rare behind-the-curtain look at the Earth Liberation Front, the radical environmental group that the FBI calls America's 'number one domestic terrorist threat.'

  • Directors
    • Marshall Curry
    • Sam Cullman
  • Writers
    • Marshall Curry
    • Matthew Hamachek
  • Stars
    • Daniel McGowan
    • Lisa McGowan
    • Tim Lewis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Marshall Curry
      • Sam Cullman
    • Writers
      • Marshall Curry
      • Matthew Hamachek
    • Stars
      • Daniel McGowan
      • Lisa McGowan
      • Tim Lewis
    • 17User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 6 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:09
    U.S. Version
    IF A TREE FALLS: A STORY OF THE EARTH LIBERATION FRONT
    Trailer 2:12
    IF A TREE FALLS: A STORY OF THE EARTH LIBERATION FRONT
    IF A TREE FALLS: A STORY OF THE EARTH LIBERATION FRONT
    Trailer 2:12
    IF A TREE FALLS: A STORY OF THE EARTH LIBERATION FRONT

    Photos5

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    Top cast22

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    Daniel McGowan
    • Self - Earth Liberation Front Activist
    Lisa McGowan
    • Self - Daniel's Sister
    Tim Lewis
    Tim Lewis
    • Self - Activist & Filmmaker
    Kirk Engdall
    • Self - Assistant U.S. Attorney
    Jim Flynn
    • Self - Former Editor, Earth First Journal
    Jenny Synan
    • Self - Daniel's Girlfriend
    Susan Synan
    • Self - Jenny's Mother
    Bill Barton
    • Self - Native Forest Council
    Leslie James Pickering
    • Self - Former ELF Spokesman
    Greg Harvey
    • Self - Detective, Eugene Police Department
    Chuck Tilby
    • Self - Captain, Eugene Police Department
    Suzanne Savoie
    • Self - Daniel's Ex-Girlfriend
    Steve Swanson
    • Self - President, Superior Lumber
    Chuck Wert
    • Self - Executive Vice President, Superior Lumber
    Don Rice
    • Self - Manager, Jefferson Poplar Farms
    Jake Ferguson
    • Self - Earth Liberation Front Activist
    Dan McGowan
    • Self - Daniel's Father
    Lauren Regan
    • Self - Daniel's Legal Team
    • Directors
      • Marshall Curry
      • Sam Cullman
    • Writers
      • Marshall Curry
      • Matthew Hamachek
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.13.3K
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    Featured reviews

    9rbsteury

    A Surprisingly Well-Balanced Study of Social Activism

    I saw this film this July at the Traverse City Film Festival. Actually, I was dragged there by my daughter (who is much more of an activist concerning environmental issues than am I.) I generally avoid environmental documentaries because many times they paint a very black and white view of the issues. This film is an engrossing and gratifying exception.

    The film follows former Earth Liberation Front (ELF) activist Daniel McGowan from his arrest by the FBI as an "environmental terrorist" through his legal efforts to avoid a life sentence. Even though his actions only resulted in destruction of property without loss of life or even physical harm to living creatures, the government was determined to make an example of Daniel and a few others of the formerly close-knit group. For many years they had no leads in ELF's membership and the crimes (destroying -- primarily by arson -- ranger stations and businesses that they considered destructive to the environment). They only cracked the case 5 years after the organization had disbanded by treating it as a "cold case." At that time, the FBI serendipitously uncovered information which led to the identification of one of the more hard-core and less altruistic members of the group who then turned informant on the rest of the members, which resulted in his doing no jail time at all while his fellow conspirators faced life sentences. Unfair, but not uncommon in our system of "justice."

    Daniel McGowan is a city-raised young man from New York who became infatuated with environmental activists, participating in their peaceful and legal protests. Upon seeing the foolish and counterproductive hard-nosed repression of those protests by government and police agencies, he decided to throw his lot in with others in ELF and resorted to property damage to make corporations and the government "feel the pain" of their policies.

    Here is where the documentary becomes wonderfully balanced, allowing the pursuing government agencies their frustrations and those property owners who had been attacked to voice the disruption and anxiety that ELF caused in their life. At times, ELF acted on faulty information which resulted in businesses being attacked who were completely innocent of the policies ELF felt were destructive to the earth.

    Daniel himself comes off as idealistic and frustrated, but often misguided and gullible. As his life progresses, he becomes wiser about some of his decisions and regretful of the destruction in which he participated and how the consequences of that destruction was often (but not always) negative to the environmental movement. However, after his arrest he would not testify against his fellow ELF members (one of the few) and therefore received some of the harshest punishment. One can find some sympathy for him, especially with the idea that he was equated in the justice system with terrorists such as Timothy McVeigh or the 9/11 terrorists, although he never physically harmed any living being.

    But the prosecutors are also portrayed in a generally positive light, with one saying at the end of the film (to paraphrase) that he was old enough to understand that not everything is black and white... that life is much more complicated than that. He said that once he understood where Daniel came from and why he believed as he did, he could understand why he might make the decisions he did, wrong-headed as they were. Such enlightenment being shown by our government officials is somewhat unusual.

    The co-directer, Sam Cullman, who held a Q&A after the screening at Traverse City, said this is "A" story of ELF, and not "The" story, and I think that is well-stated. The organization probably has many stories as each member had his or her own motivations.

    The larger question remains... if faced with a resistant and unresponsive establishment, how is change effected? This film adds to that discussion in a balanced and educational, but compelling way, making it one of the best docs about tactics used by social and environmental movements. 9/10
    CurtHerzstark

    Fascinating.....

    One mans terrorist is another mans freedom fighter is and old tired cliché but in this film that quote seems yet again to ring true.

    This doc explains why a group of environmentalists started to radicalize when they felt that corporations, police and politicians no longer listen to them.

    Their solution? Firebombing various facilities that according to them(later they found that some of their targets really didn't support harm to the environment, but actually the opposite)was posing a threat to the environment.

    This solution was extreme, and got the FBIs attention who started investigating their attacks. Slowly but surely FBI was closing the net but biggest question remained, was this domestic terrorism?

    And should it be viewed as domestic terrorism?

    For a viewer, like me, who never been involved in radical political organizations this film poses a lot of interesting questions, such as how far are you willing to go for your ideals? And also how easy is it to push idealistic youngsters to commit worse crimes then just illegal demonstrations, vandalism etc?

    It should be seen by anyone interested in why, how, people regardless of political views easily can be persuaded to commit crimes in order to get their agenda, message, across.

    So if you liked docs like Neverland: The Rise and Fall of the Symbionese Liberation Army (2004), The Weather Underground (2002),One Day in September (1999)etc then you should see this one.
    8Giz_Medium

    "This movie is about the elves out there"

    After the fiction comes the real stuff. This movie is about the elves out there, I mean, the E.L.F, and the shift of tactics from tree-sitting to going to burn down mills. As apologism of a terrorist organisation, it also contains a lot of reflexions and repentance, on specific actions that also had unwanted consequences or were misplanned, but in the end it is what it claims to be : a documentary on earth defenders, activism, around the pacific northwest and the eugene green anarchist scene in the 1990's. It then goes on to follow the case of Daniel McGowan, and his codefendent, whose actions were never linked to them until the police taskforce working on it found a weaker link to pressure to wear a wiretap and trick all of them into remembering vocally the past, so yeah, it's about the E.L.F and it's repression, making sure to include all possible viewpoints (the police who worked against them, the prosecutors from the legal system, the mills owners, other activists with different viewpoints, the snitch, etc.).
    The_Film_Cricket

    What makes a terrorist?

    What are the criteria for being a terrorist? What should be the criteria for a being a terrorist? Is an environmentalist who burns down the empty office of a logging company in the middle of the night comparable to crimes committed by people like Timothy McVeigh or Osama bin Laden? Is this crime to be put on the same legal shelf as those who fly planes into skyscrapers and kill thousands of people? Ask any three people and you are likely to get three different answers, after all, the people you ask probably aren't the ones going to prison for it.

    Marshall Curry's documentary If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front begins by showing us some acts of "eco-terrorism", acts in which radical environmentalists whose peaceful protests have fallen on deaf ears and turned up the heat by setting fires to lumber mills, wild horse corrals, SUV dealerships and meat packing plants. They were called The Earth Liberation Front – or E.L.F. – unorganized group of radicals willing to cause millions of dollars in property damage in the name of keeping corporate America from destroying the planet. The knee-jerk reaction, of course, is to dismiss these individuals as a bunch of over-zealous ya-hoos who just enjoy watching things burn. Yet, the film is something more, as we watch it, we are taken into the lives of some of the members of the E.L.F. and begin to understand what they are fighting for. That leads to questions of whether or not their legal prosecution is really fair.

    The E.L.F. get the attention of, not only their targets, but the F.B.I. who quickly labels the group as "The number one domestic terrorist threat" and launches a full-scale investigation of the individuals involved, an investigation that resembles in many ways the F.B.I.'s investigation of the mafia 50 years ago.

    What is interesting is that even while we don't agree with what the E.L.F. is doing, the film gives us images that allow us to understand their point of view. We see footage of trees that have stood for thousands of years, blindly cut down. We see horse mills, with hundreds of dead horses hung from the ceiling. We see the heartbreaking sight of a group of legendary trees sawed down to make a parking lot.

    We see the protesters themselves, camped out in the trees that are to be cut down, beaten and maced unmercifully by the local police. In a scene that resembles the riots of the 1960s, we see members of the E.L.F. with their faces covered marching into the streets and then beaten and clubbed. The irony is that the members of the group who are clearly guilty of vandalism haven't done any physical harm to other human beings but are being beaten down by law enforcement as if they were murderers.

    Let us make no mistake, what the E.L.F doing is wrong, unlawful and is deserving a punishment by law, and yes, jail time. The point is that this film questions the severity of the extent of that punishment. Curry's film moves very deeply into that very question and wonders about the fate of Daniel McGowen, whose story provides the film's bookends, goes under house arrest in his sister's home until his trial in which it will be decided what kind of jail time he will do for the crime of arson. He seems like a nice kid with a sweet voice, somewhere in his mid-20s who smiles a lot, but has eyes that are much more thoughtful, focused and intelligent than most kids his age. When he goes to trial and receives his sentence, we aren't surprised that it is harsh. What does surprise us is the information that McGowan is now going to spend the rest of his life on the government's terrorist watchdog list. Why? His crime, at best, results in malicious vandalism. Why a life sentence on the same list as Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the architect of the 9/11 attacks?
    8paul2001sw-1

    Terrorists-U-Like

    What do you do if you feel something terrible is happening, and the cause of that terrible thing is systematic? - that is, the systems for governing our world offer no possibility of change, because they themselves are part of the problem. Either you accept the system, or you fight it - and if your methods include violence, you thereby become a terrorist, and (in a sense) an enemy of those who chose to work within the system instead. The Earth Liberation Front were a group of ecological activists who took to arson; and whose members eventually wound up in gaol. This film allows them to present their case, and interestingly, they come over as intelligent and thoughtful and not in the least wild or woolly in their thinking. To its credit, the film also interviews some of their targets and those responsible for their prosecution, who are not demonised and who also come over as human. The only thing I struggled with was the insistence of front members that they weren't terrorists. I rather think they were - but this thought-provoking documentary raises the question of whether being a terrorist is always wrong, and doesn't offer easy answers in either direction.

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Quotes

      Daniel McGowan - Earth Liberation Front Activist: When you're screaming at the top of your lungs and no one hears you, what are you supposed to do?

    • Connections
      Edited into P.O.V.: If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Ada
      Written by Matt Berninger (as Matthew Berninger) and Aaron Dessner

      Performed by The National

      Courtesy of Beggars Banquet Records Ltd

      Published by Val Jester Music (ASCAP) and ABD 13 Music (ASCAP) administered by BUg

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 2011 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • If a Tree Falls
    • Filming locations
      • Oregon, USA
    • Production companies
      • Marshall Curry Productions LLC
      • ITVS International
      • Lucky Hat Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $61,794
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,634
      • Jun 26, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $61,794
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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