we watched the documentary home, narrated by glenn close. beautiful yet hard-hitting, it 'shows the diversity of life on Earth and how humanity is threatening the ecological balance of the planet.' pretty gritty for almost two hours, the last five minutes detail possible solutions and present the url http://goodplanet.org/en.
'Although the movie is formally under a Creative Commons license[citation needed], it has no official copyright. Yann Arthus-Bertrand emphasized in a TED talk [10] that the movie has no copyright: "This film have [sic] no copyright. On the fifth of June, the environmental day, everyone can download the movie on Internet. The film is given for free to the distributor for TV and theater to show it the five of June. There is no business on this movie. It is available for schools, cities, NGOs and you." This means the film can be distributed, copied, uploaded, burned to DVD, etc., without restrictions if not altered or edited. ClearBits, an online digital media community, provides a torrent of the 93-minute version in high-definition mp4 format.'
2011-01-01
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