
Environmental Film Festival at Yale 2025
Private Location (sign in to display)
View MapDetails
Want to learn more? Visit our website to learn about all panelists and EFFY 2025 films! http://effy.yale.edu/
Give us a follow on social media at:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yaleeffy/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yale.effy/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/environmental-film-festival-at-yale/
Agenda (Please Register for Individual Events):
Tuesday, April 1th, 7 - 9PM:
*Secret* Community Opening,
First We Bombed New Mexico at Best Video
Wednesday, April 2th, 5 - 6:30 PM :
How Do We Speak for the Trees: Exploring Different Forms of Climate Communication
Thursday, April 3th, 7 - 10 PM :
Reckoning With Our Legacies of Love and Loss
Friday, April 5th, 7 - 10 PM :
Returning to Ancestral Hands: Indigenous-Led Land Restoration and Healing
Saturday, April 6th, 4 - 5 PM:
Yale Student Film Showcase
Saturday, April 6th, 5:30 - 8 PM:
Seeds of Resistance
Saturday, April 6th, 8 PM - 10 PM:
2025 Closing Gala
Agenda
Past Events
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Student Film Panel portion of the Environmental Film Festival at Yale.
5:30 PM – 8:00 PM
Seeds of Resistance highlights the inspirational stories of activists working to advance climate science and environmental justice.
8:00 PM – 10:00 PM
EFFY invites you to join our gala celebrating the 17th year of the festival! Enjoy food and discussion with friends and filmmakers after the conclusion of our last film block and panel discussion.
7:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Join EFFY for a film block of two films on Indigenous-Led Ecological Restoration.
From the Montana plains to the wetland forests of Jamaica, traditional forms of land management revitalize cultural knowledge and heal legacies of colonialism, extraction, and extinction. The two films in this panel share the momentous efforts of the Blackfoot Nation to restore the wild buffalo on their ancestral territory, and a retelling of Queen Nanny, a national heroine of Jamaica. These stories coalesce to highlight how climate resilience is strengthened by returning to the wisdom of Indigenous restoration practices, African spiritualism, and ecological caretakers.
--
Bring Them Home/Aiskótáhkapiyaaya chronicles a decades-long initiative by members of the Blackfoot Confederacy to bring wild buffalo (Blackfeet: iinnii) back to the Blackfeet Reservation. A thriving wild buffalo population would not only reconnect Blackfeet with a central part of their heritage, spirituality and identity, but would provide economic opportunities and healing for the community. Along the way, however, the initiative faces obstacles from ranchers who see the buffalo as a threat to the cattle ranches that dominate the land and are a legacy of colonization.
Reimagining Queen Nanny of the Maroons, produced by Jamaican NYU Professor Leo Douglas, seeks to retell the story of Queen Nanny of the Maroons, national heroine of Jamaica. Traditionally Queen Nanny (also known as Grandie Nanny) has been portrayed through a lens of mountain guerrilla warfare and her successful anti-slavery emancipatory military campaigns in the early to mid-1700s. But here she is represented in what some scholars of the Black Atlantic and Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade believe to be a more accurate and broader reality – an early Afro-Caribbean ecologist, a protector of the springs, forests and watersheds, and as the quintessential Black conservationist and environmental justice leader, and scholar of the wild places of the mountains of Jamaica. The “Reimagining Nanny: Her Sword – A Seed Documentary” was initiated as part of a larger project reflecting on Jamaica’s 60th year of national independence from Great Britain.
--
Learn more about our overall agenda at https://effy.yale.edu/.
7:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Join award-winning documentarians Chess Cabrera and Alyssa Beebe ("From Earth to Earth: The Lost Art of Dying In America") and interdisciplinary artist Sarah Bird ("Giants Rising") for a profound conversation on mortality, memory, and renewal. Moderated by Brit Fleck, this discussion explores natural burial practices, the resilience of California’s ancient redwoods, and the deep connection between honoring our dead and protecting our environment. Discover how embracing our mortality can guide us toward a more mindful and sustainable future.
5:00 PM – 6:30 PM
There are several ways to discuss the environment: news articles, white papers, policy memos, and even plays. How do these mediums differ in audiences and messaging as they talk about the same thing? Join the Environmental Film Festival at Yale as it brings together great communicators to converse about how we tell stories about climate and the environment.
We're excited to be joined by:
Susan Wollschlager, Director of Marketing and Communications at The Nature Conservancy in Connecticut
Emily Sorenson, ecodramaturgy doctoral candidate at the David Geffen School of Drama
Susan Butts, Director of Collections & Research at the Yale Peabody Museum
Dr. Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, will moderate the conservation.