All-Time Top 10 Environmental Films


If you鈥檙e looking for movies to add to your Netflix queue, how about adding a few excellent, entertaining films with ecological angles? And no, they aren't all documentaries; there are action flicks, movies based on real-life stories of inspirational people, and even animated films that you and the kids will enjoy. Karl Burkart gave his picks for the Top 10 Environmental Films of all time on recently, and we鈥檝e added a few suggestions of our own.

10. (1982)
9. (2006)
8. (2004)
7. (2003) & (2001)
6. (1992)
5. (2009) 
4. (1974) & (1973)
3. (1979)
2. (2000)
1. (2008)

探花精选 editors鈥 additional choices:

(1983)

This gripping film tells the real-life story of Karen Silkwood, played by the fantastic Meryl Streep, who worked at a plutonium processing plant. To keep her from spilling information about worker safety violations to a New York Times reporter, she was intentionally contaminated and perhaps murdered.

(Gwoemul, 2006)

The opening scene of this monster flick is based on a notorious real-life incident: It鈥檚 2000, and a US military mortician orders a Korean subordinate to pour hundreds of bottles of old formaldehyde down the sink. Though the worker protests that the toxic chemical will be dumped in Seoul鈥檚 Han River, he eventually complies. (In reality, the action enraged locals and spurred anti-American demonstrations in South Korea). The movie then jumps ahead a couple years to a fisherman bitten by an enormous tadpole-like creature. The mutated water-dwelling animal grows rapidly, and begins terrorizing the people of Seoul.

(1995)

鈥淲aterworld was really prescient,鈥 says senior editor Julie Leibach. 鈥淭he polar ice caps have melted, drowning land and leaving people competing for resources. Oh鈥攁nd some people have gills. If there鈥檚 an up side to global warming, maybe it鈥檚 that we can look forward to gills.鈥 (She then went on to describe the plot in more detail for several minutes.) Dennis Hopper plays the bad guy, Kevin Costner plays the gilled hero.

(2007)

Renowned filmmaker Werner Herzog travels to Antarctica where he meets the curious characters who choose to live at a research station on the bottom of the world. From penguin m茅nage 脿 trios and insanity to electric-guitar playing scientists to a Harvard-educated linguist who works in the greenhouse, Herzog offers a fascinating look at polar scientists and the environment and organisms they study.

(2002)

鈥淭he best nature documentary ever done,鈥 is how Editor in Chief David Seideman describes this film, which tells the story of Pale Male, a red tailed hawk that lives on the ledge of a Fifth Avenue building in Manhattan. The gripping documentary traces the hawk as he courts, breeds and hunts. You鈥檒l find yourself rooting for Pale Male鈥檚 survival, as his avid urban fans do in the film.