Chasing Coral is a 1 hour 33 minutes documentary directed by Jeff Orlowski following a group of photographers and scientists as they attempt to capture the processes of coral bleaching. The plan is put together by Richard Vevers, a reef surveyor after he himself observes the effects of bleaching on a reef he recently surveyed. After teaming up with Trevor Mendelow, Zachary Rago, and other scientists, they plan to rig time lapse cameras in areas of reef, although Nature has other plans…
Along this journey, they meet many people, and face many difficulties. For example, one of the first people they talk to is Dr. Ruth Gates, the director of the Hawaiian Institute of Marine Biology,who explains the science about coral bleaching. While one of the difficulties is actually making a time-lapse camera that would work underwater, without accumulating encrusting organisms.
By following Coral bleaching chasing Coral shows us one of the largest and most destructive ways global warming is harming the planet. The documentary gives us a day to day view of this process, which I hope, will be very useful to scientists in the future. That said one of the coolest processes to me was the process of coral floressing. In this …show more content…
You could see how hard this experience was for those filming it. They wanted to use a camera to detach themselves from this horrible event, when that didn’t pan out they were forced to dive day in and day out, just watching as the corals they loved so passionately turn white and die. The juxtaposition this movie creates between the vibrant pulsating healthy corals, and the bleached or dead ones, forms an amazing scene of tragedy. The strongest moment in the film for me was when Zachary Rago just pulls apart this rotting piece of dead bleached soft coral, to think that we are responsible for that is