Sharkwater

Sharkwater

Promotional poster for Sharkwater
Directed by Rob Stewart
Produced by Rob Stewart
Starring Rob Stewart
Paul Watson
Music by Moby
Nina Simone
Ali Farka Toure
The Riderless
Geoffrey Oryema
Aphex Twin
Portishead
Distributed by Freestyle Releasing
Release date(s) September 28, 2007 FL National Release November 2, 2007
Running time 89 min
Country Canada
Language English

Sharkwater is a 2007 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Rob Stewart, who also narrates it. In the film, Stewart seeks to deflate current attitudes about sharks, and exposes how the voracious shark-hunting industry is driving them to extinction.

Filmed in high definition video, Sharkwater explores the densest shark populations in the world, exposing the exploitation and corruption of the shark-hunting industry in the marine reserves of Cocos Island, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador.

Stewart travels with Paul Watson and his Sea Shepherd Conservation Society as they confront shark poachers in Guatemala and Costa Rica. Among the group's experiences are boat chases with poachers and police, boat ramming, hidden camera footage of massive shark finning facilities, corrupt court systems and eventually attempted murder charges which force Stewart and Watson to flee from the police. Stewart explores how the increasing demand for shark-fin soup in Asia is fueling an illegal trade in sharks. His expedition is cut short, however, when he is diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis (from which he recovers).

Stewart discovers that sharks have gone from predator to prey, and how despite surviving the Earth's history of mass extinctions, as well as being a predator that prevents the overconsumption of plankton by other fish, moderating global warming, they could easily be wiped out within a few years.

The film has won eight major awards and been nominated an additional three times.[1]

Awards

Sharkwater has received 33 international awards.

References

External links