Tuesday, 26 September 2017

Film Review: "Trophy" (2017).


"Save the species, at what cost?" This is Trophy. This documentary film directed by Christina Clusiau and Shaul Schwarz. The film follows Philip Glass, a Texas-based sheep breeder and life-long hunter who is on a quest to collect the "Big Five" (elephant, buffalo, lion, leopard, and rhino). Philip is deeply connected to the land and animals. He spends days or weeks tracking animals in their natural environment before getting his kill. He considers himself a conservationist, and believes the dollars he spends hunting in Africa go back to local communities and help preserve the animals he covets for future generations. This is an argument echoed in the work of Chris Moore, a Zimbabwean wildlife officer whose anti-poaching campaign is partially subsidized by big-game hunters like Philip. Chris works with government authorities and communities to keep people safe from wild animals. He also protects those animals from ruthless poachers. The great irony of Chris’s work is that he goes to "extreme lengths" to protect endangered animals, only to have them killed by trophy hunters. Trophy enters the world of ranched hunting through businessman and self-confessed animal lover Christo Gomes. Christo owns Mabula Pro Safaris in South Africa, which offers all-inclusive guided safaris for hunters from across the world. For $25,000 to $100,000 a hunter can shoot, kill and bring home a great African animal "trophy." For Christo, the big money comes from specialty breeding that services the tastes and trends of wealthy hunters. About 70% of Christo’s business comes from American hunting clients. Adding another layer, we meet John Hume, the world’s largest private rhino breeder. Hume believes that legalization of the trade in rhino horn is the only way to save the rhino from extinction. Every two years, he trims his rhinos’ horns and has stockpiled over five tons of horn. He has invested $50 million of his life savings into the project and now has nearly fifteen-hundred rhino. Yet he remains a controversial figure and enemy of the animal rights movement. As Africa’s most iconic animals continue to vanish in droves, can the controversial practices of hunting and breeding actually help the numbers thrive? Can assigning a value to an animal possibly help conserve it? What gives humans the right to own animals and to decide whether they live or die? And is there any real future for a "natural" world in our rapidly developing, capitalist world? In Schwarz’s and Clusiau’s richly cinematic safari, anything is possible, and nothing is as you would expect.

It behooves those of us with curiosity, a conscience, and a desire to find solutions to pay attention. The documentary asks us to consider one such issue, and as such is worth a little discomfort. In the style of a Louis Theroux documentary, the filmmakers give us extensive insight into the hunters' reasoning for doing things some of us might think cruel and even disgusting. However, the new documentary suggests that not only is the issue of hunting vs. conservationism not so black-and-white, but that the two are intertwined.

Simon says Trophy receives:


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