How Storytelling Helped Topple a $47 Million Development That Threatened Local Wildlife
In late 2019, I moved to the US with big dreams of advancing my career as a documentary filmmaker and photographer. I secured a huge project, filming the official trailer for Olympus’s new camera, but the pandemic abruptly shut everything down. By the time life resumed, my wife and I had a newborn and a giant puppy, and she asked me to consider moving to Florida for family support. Reluctantly, I agreed, despite my initial misgivings about the state.
But it didn’t take long for Florida to surprise me. A producer connected me with 17-year-old Luca Martinez, a local photographer making waves with his Everglades explorations. Our collaboration turned into a deeper appreciation for Florida’s nature, leading us to work together on conservation efforts, including stopping the Miami Wilds project—a development that threatened the endangered bonneted bats. The project solidified for me that filmmaking is more than just a job—it’s a way to protect the beauty of the world.
Living with the Achuar // The dream people of the Amazon
There are many communities living within the Amazon forest. Some we know of, and some of them have continued to succeed in shying away from western eyes. The Achuar community I stayed with was only 1 out of 6,000 communities thriving beneath the trees that act as the lungs of our planet. Their entire existence relies on the Amazon Rain Forest. It is their apothecary, their source of nourishment, a spiritual guide, and most importantly, the place they call home.
MIDBURN 2017 - THE LUCID ALBUM AND HOW I DID IT
Midburn 2017 - The Lucid dream album and how I've animated the photos