Environmental Film Festival 2025
23 films, talks, art, get togethers and even a beach clean — all in the name of the blue and green ball we call home.
Overview
The Environmental Film Festival returns this October to celebrate its 15th birthday with a week-long program spanning 23 titles — including 14 premieres — alongside cine-art talks under the theme "Environment is Everywhere." From Thursday, October 16 to Thursday, October 23, cinemas across Melbourne will host feature films, shorts, documentaries and discussions celebrating the intersection of art, activism and the environment.
Leading the program is Documerica, Self-Portrait of a Nation on the Brink, a recollection of an American natural photo survey undertaken in the 1970s, The People's Tree, a story of the impacts of environmental legislation on tree trimmers in India and These Sacred Hills, an insight into the culture and history of the Rock Creek Band of the Yakama Nation, who's sacred sites are threatened by a proposed green energy project.

The World According To My Dad, directed by Marta Kovářová
Let's not forget The World According To My Dad, a heartwarming documentary about director Marta Kovářová's physicist father, who dreams of putting a stop to climate change with bold ideas — or No More History Without Us, a manifesto documentary by two Amazonian filmmakers on the falsehoods invented by European colonisers about the Amazon rainforest and its many peoples.
This is just the tip of the program's iceberg, and you can find the full offering on the website. Beyond the screen, there'll be some in-person events, including the festival's 15th birthday soiree serving plant-based bites, and a community beach clean on Elwood Beach.
Freyja Gillard, Co-Director of Environmental Films Australia, said: "This year's program is really unique for us, focusing on the idea that the environment is indeed everywhere; it's not an 'other', separate from us, only available in the 'wild'. The vast majority of humans live in urban spaces and cities and this year's selection really showcases what that looks like in an environmental-sense, exploring the interconnection between people and place, what our environments mean to us, and what we mean to our environments."
The Environmental Film Festival will run at cinemas and venues around Melbourne from Thursday, October 16 to Thursday, October 23. For tickets or more information, visit the website.
Header: 'No More History Without Us', directed by Priscilla Brasil.
Images courtesy of Environmental Film Festival