A film by Eric Bendick
"Highly recommended. The scope of the video is huge. Can the gray of the highways and the green of wildlife habitat coexist? We hope so."
- Educational Media Reviews Online
"A remarkable film about the inroads we have made - figuratively and literally - across the landscape. The paving of natural habitat in every direction, has both enabled us to move at will and marginalized and/or isolated all other land-based animals into the segregated pockets our roads have created for them. At once a road-trip and field experiment, this film is as wonderful to watch and enjoy as it is eye opening."
Blue Planet Film Festival
“Division Street [takes] us on a road trip that visits the engineers, ecologists and others who are attempting to transform the future of US roads and are shaping the emerging green transportation movement. The film matches thoughtful commentary with some striking photography, adventurous editing and a good, well-matched soundtrack to deliver an entertaining and thought-provoking experience.”
Reel Earth Film Festival, New Zealand
Official Selection
2009 Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival
Nominations:
Best Conservation Program & Marion Zunz Newcomer Award
K-12 Schools, Public Libraries, & Non-Profits: $89
Colleges, Institutions, & Businesses: $195
Shot in stunning locations throughout North America -- including Banff National Park, Glacier National Park, Yellowstone, and the Everglades -- Division Street takes us on a road-trip that looks at the promise of wildlife corridors, the potential for 'greening' our highway system, and the fusion of high-tech engineering with the best and brightest environmental research happening today.
America's road network was largely created before the rise of modern ecology. Now, with greater concern for the environment, the film asks, how do we balance those concerns with our ongoing transportation needs?
Among those featured are:
Dr. Richard Forman, Prof of Landscape Ecology, Harvard University; Dr. Marty Main, Professor of Wildlife Ecology, University of Florida; and Linda Chapin, Director of the Metropolitan Center for Regional Studies, University of Central Florida.