Cadet 1947
"Gwyr" documentary film captures elements of local history, culture, ecosystems, and natural resources. The film explores the harmonious blend and integration of Welsh culture over time; an outlook of…
Cadet 1947
"Gwyr" documentary film captures elements of local history, culture, ecosystems, and natural resources. The film explores the harmonious blend and integration of Welsh culture over time; an outlook of how local culture was shaped by natural phenomena, climatic conditions, geology, flora, and other environmental factors. "Gwyr" documentary film presents local residential and castle architecture, coastal topography, tidal events, and habitat and focus on the region's biodiversity. 5 years in the making and after a long and wonderful journey of participating and competing at film festivals, the first full feature "GWYR" documentary film has proudly collected a total of 17 awards for Best Documentary, Best Film, and Best Cinematography in festivals in the US, UK, Canada, Spain, and other countries. The production team has been working for the sustainable development of our region utilising the power of arts & culture within our own communities. This is a Not-For-Profit story-telling, community-driven, collaborative project sharing experiences, co-creating and co-producing documentary films capturing elements of Wales' history, culture, ecosystems, and biodiversity. The production team has collaborated with more than 65 volunteers, all passionate about nature and its biodiversity. More than 25 students joined the team alongside 40 contributors from local communities. A team of volunteers from local residents, farmers, environmentalists, academics, historians, and research scholars took part in the production of the documentary films. As this is a not-for-profit project, the production's core mission is to capture and document Wales' natural beauty and cultural, historical, and environmental characteristics with a multi-level sustainable approach.
Cadet 1947
Drama,History,War
Film Details
"Gwyr" documentary film captures elements of local history, culture, ecosystems, and natural resources. The film explores the harmonious blend and integration of Welsh culture over time; an outlook of how local culture was shaped by natural phenomena, climatic conditions, geology, flora, and other environmental factors. "Gwyr" documentary film presents local residential and castle architecture, coastal topography, tidal events, and habitat and focus on the region's biodiversity.
5 years in the making and after a long and wonderful journey of participating and competing at film festivals, the first full feature "GWYR" documentary film has proudly collected a total of 17 awards for Best Documentary, Best Film, and Best Cinematography in festivals in the US, UK, Canada, Spain, and other countries. The production team has been working for the sustainable development of our region utilising the power of arts & culture within our own communities. This is a Not-For-Profit story-telling, community-driven, collaborative project sharing experiences, co-creating and co-producing documentary films capturing elements of Wales' history, culture, ecosystems, and biodiversity.
The production team has collaborated with more than 65 volunteers, all passionate about nature and its biodiversity. More than 25 students joined the team alongside 40 contributors from local communities. A team of volunteers from local residents, farmers, environmentalists, academics, historians, and research scholars took part in the production of the documentary films.
As this is a not-for-profit project, the production's core mission is to capture and document Wales' natural beauty and cultural, historical, and environmental characteristics with a multi-level sustainable approach..