Directed by Barry Cohen, Toxic Trespass is an 80-minute documentary that “delves into the chemical soup that surrounds us and that we’ve taken for granted.” In 2008, it won “Best Documentary” by the Writer’s Guild of Canada (WGC). This documentary was shown on Thursday, February 4 during International Week, as a part of the National Film Board of Canada’s movie showcase.
A Review.
I don’t even know how I should begin. After the film, I was just wondering around the campus and thinking about the film and the ideas I was having. I was touched, inspired and disappointed. I will try to capture my feelings and thoughts in this little blog in the hopes that we can all unite together to solve this problem. After all, united we stand, divided we fall.
This friend of mine is allergic to peanuts; a year ago he told me that almonds and walnuts are no longer edible for him. Just before the Christmas, he found out that he is pretty much allergic to any types of nuts now. We had always suspected if environmental change has any thing to do with this. After watching the film “Toxic Trespass,” I think we are not so far off the track.
In the film, there are many very convincing and compelling evidences where the toxins in the environment are altering our body system. There are cancer-inducing agents flowing in the air, gene-mutating chemicals running down the water. Those toxins even change sex ratio; a native reserve in Ontario found that under the influence of the chemical substances, females were produced twice as often as males! Pollution is everywhere, and we seem have no protections against those chemical soups. “You can say no to unprotected sex, you can quit smoking, but you can’t stop breathing;” one of the health care professionals has made a very good point in the film. I think we cannot just simply address this environmental problem as “their problems” and think the effects are “far away.”
We are aware of those issues, yet there are minimum amount of laws and regulations put in place to help stopping those toxics. In the film, government chooses to ignore the problem and major powerful cooperations deny the responsibilities.
I felt that thinking about the problem just made it larger and more complicated! I felt helpless that we would never be able to solve this problem at all. I guess the point is not to solve the problem with a single step and an easy solution; rather is to start now and have more people involved in it. If our generation cannot solve the problem, it shall carry on as a legacy.
-Yvonne, I-Week blogger