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The Elephant in the Room (film)

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The Elephant in the Room
File:The Elephant in the Room poster.jpg
Promotional poster
Directed byTariq Chow
Produced byAmanda Gardner
Written byTariq Chow
Narrated byVirginia McKenna
Music byMatthew Buckner
CinematographyEmma Peirson-Hagger
Edited byTariq Chow
Production
company
Release date
Running time
13 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

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The Elephant in the Room is a 2014 British short documentary film directed and written by Tariq Chow, produced by Amanda Gardner, and narrated by Virginia McKenna.[2] The films explores and examines the plight of captive elephants held in solitary confinement in European zoos.[3]

Summary[edit]

The Elephant in the Room examines the plight of captive elephants kept in solitary conditions. It lays bare the consequences for elephants in Europe, condemned to solitary confinement; imprisoned, isolated and ignored[3] and explores the damaging industry of zoos in the context of elephant psychology and behaviour.[4]

Set against the backdrop of the story of the elephant Pole Pole from the film An Elephant Called Slowly and the efforts of Born Free Foundation's founders to save her, academics, experts and activists use current cases of elephant captivity to illustrate the very real consequences of such imprisonment, and offer a potential solution to stop the suffering for these isolated and ignored animals.[5] The film includes interviews with Dr Joyce Poole, Dr Rob Atkinson, Chris Draper, Adam Roberts, Ed Stewart and Virginia McKenna.[6]

Appearances[edit]

Production[edit]

Development and pre-production[edit]

A group of University of Hertfordshire created the 13-minute documentary. It provides a look at the issue of the plight of captive elephants kept in solitary conditions through working in conjunction with wildlife charity; the Born Free Foundation.[4] It was part funded by the Warner Bros. Creative Talent scholarship. The film aims to increase awareness about the plight of captive elephants held in isolation in zoos and circuses across Europe.[5]

"We decided that we would make this the main topic of our film, as we felt that it was an issue that not many people were currently aware of. One of the main challenges in making the film was trying to choose the most poignant footage to use in order to convey the correct message to the audience, but we were extremely fortunate to get the Born Free Foundation on board – we could not have made The Elephant in the Room without their advice and support."

—Amanda Gardner, producer of The Elephant in the Room[4]

Producer and assistant editor Amanda Gardner explained that the team were inspired to make The Elephant in the Room after reading a Born Free Foundation report entitled, ‘Innocent Prisoner’, which talked about the more than 40 elephants living on their own in captivity across Europe. She said, "We decided that we would make this the main topic of our film, as we felt that it was an issue that not many people were currently aware of. One of the main challenges in making the film was trying to choose the most poignant footage to use in order to convey the correct message to the audience, but we were extremely fortunate to get the Born Free Foundation on board – we could not have made The Elephant in the Room without their advice and support."[4]

Filming and post-production[edit]

The film is narrated by actress and Born Free Foundation Founder Virginia McKenna. Film makers (producer and assistant editor Amanda Gardner; writer, director and editor Tariq Chow; responsible for sound, music and animation Matthew Buckner, and responsible for camera and lighting Emma Peirson-Hagger) travelled abroad to California, Romania and Norway to film footage. They located, interviewed and drew upon the knowledge and experiences of specialists and experts in the animal welfare field and working within several world-renowned charities.[4]

Time and detail was then spent on writing the narration, editing and creating the soundtrack and animation. One of the main aims of the film was attempting to convey the message regarding how elephants living in solitary confinement can be helped.[4]

Release[edit]

A private screening of The Elephant in the Room was held at the Warner Bros. De Lane Lea Studios in London on 9 September 2014, attended by representatives from the film industry, the national press and the animal welfare industry. This was followed by a questions and answers, and discussion with Will Travers, Adam Roberts, Virginia McKenna, Chris Draper, Dr Rob Atkinson and Tariq Chow. The film was uploaded on YouTube and Vimeo the following day. It gained internet popularity under the hashtag: #Elefilm.[4]

Reception[edit]

Kate Snowdon of Trident Media said of The Elephant in the Room, "in scenes reminiscent of critically acclaimed documentary Blackfish, they explore the damaging industry of zoos in the context of what we now know about elephant psychology and behaviour."[4] James Penfold of ITV said of the film, "Compelling, powerful and tenaciously edited." Alice Bhandhukravi of BBC called it "An important and moving film."[7]

Awards and nominations[edit]

Year Award Category Result
2014 University of Hertfordshire's Visions Festival ITV Award for Documentary[8] Won[4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. "The Elephant In The Room Narrated By Virginia McKenna". Film Pill Ltd. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  2. Willard, Laura. "Would Spending 27 Years Alone Make You Go 'Mad'? That's What It Did To Her". Upworthy. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "The Elephant In The Room". FestivalFocus. Archived from the original on 1 February 2015. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 Snowdon, Kate. "The Elephant in the Room". Trident Media. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "About". The Elephant in the Room. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  6. "The elephant in the room – solitary elephants revealed". Endcap. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  7. "Home". The Elephant in the Room. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  8. "The Elephant in the Room – award winning documentary". Conservation Action Trust. Retrieved 1 February 2015.

External links[edit]


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