From Billions to None
The Passenger Pigeon's Flight to Extinction

 

"A teachable moment...
teachable art."

Chicago Sun-Times

 
 

 
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"Compelling and cautionary...we get chilling history...filled with information and passion and does a remarkably good job of using computer-generated animation to show us what it must have been like to see a passenger pigeon flock."

Chicago Tribune

"A masterly combination of interviews with modern authorities, historical documentation, and scenic views of areas where these birds formerly darkened the skies...A brilliant account of an uparalleled conservation tragedy...Highly recommended."

Library Journal

Full of gorgeous cinematography..compelling and beautiful...a call to action for birders and anyone else who values the natural world."

BirdwatchingDaily.com

From Billions to None: The Passenger Pigeon's Flight to Extinction reveals the compelling story of the unlikely extinction of the passenger pigeon. For millennia, the sleek long-distance flyer was the most abundant bird in North America and perhaps the world. Then, in a matter of decades, it was hunted to extinction. On September 1, 1914, Martha, the last passenger pigeon in captivity, died in the Cincinnati Zoo, marking the end of the species.

This award-winning film follows naturalist and author Joel Greenberg, A Feathered River Across the Sky: The Passenger Pigeon's Flight to Extinction, (Bloomsbury USA, 2014), as well as scientists, artists and teachers that are drawn to this literal teachable moment and its striking relevance to conservation challenges today. The "De-extinction" movement and its plan to bring back the passenger pigeon, is briefly explored. Highlights include breathtaking CGI animation of massive flocks, as well as astonishing aerials captured by remote control quadcopters equipped with GoPro cameras.

From Billions to None garnered a Broadcast Award from the 2014 American Conservation Film Festival; the award is given to films with "compelling conservation issues that educate, motivate and inspire viewers."

Photo credits above l to r: Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh; White House Collection; Waubansee Productions; Smithsonian Archives; NOAA; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Department

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American Conservation Film Festival Broadcast Award Winner - 2014




Funded in part by: The Wisconsin Society for Ornithology, The Illinois Arts Council Agency, The Rotman Family Charitable Gift Fund