Showcase of the best films in the world today.
Audience Awards (from FEEDBACK Festival):
Best Feature Film: India’s Circularity – Not a Trend, But a Tradition from the Margins
Best Short Film: SLOWLY
Best Direction: THE VEGAN POULTRY PARTY
SLOWLY, 2min., South Korea
Directed by Seohyeon Kim
Set in the desolate expanse of a mudflat in the year 2125, this monodrama follows a solitary figure wandering through the remnants of a world long abandoned by humanity. In the silence left by human absence, nature has reclaimed its voice. Stones, wind, and shifting tides become the character’s only companions, guiding a quiet meditation on survival, memory, and renewal. Through this intimate encounter with the elemental world, the film contemplates what coexistence might mean after environmental collapse—when the boundaries between human and nature have dissolved, leaving only the rhythm of the earth itself.
https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-slowly-environmental

THE VEGAN POULTRY FARMER, 50min., Netherlands
Directed by Kadir Van Lohuizen
In the documentary The Vegan Poultry Farmer, renowned photographer and filmmaker Kadir van Lohuizen follows Ruud Zanders, a poultry farmer from the Dutch province of Limburg. After the bankruptcy of his large-scale poultry operations, Ruud reinvented himself with a more sustainable and animal friendly poultry farm: Kipster. The innovative concept has garnered international attention and now stands on the brink of global expansion.
https://theveganpoultryfarmer.com/
https://www.instagram.com/deveganveehouder
https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-the-vegan-poultry-farmer

India’s Circularity – Not a Trend, But a Tradition from the Margins, 70min., India
Directed by Purva Tavri
Across India’s overlooked margins, India’s Circularity – Not a Trend, But a Tradition from the Margins reveals how reuse, repair, and regeneration are not innovations—but inherited ways of life rooted in culture, necessity, and care. Featuring voices across sectors—artists, makers, NGO leaders, entrepreneurs, government officials, planners, engineers, institutions, and homemakers—the film journeys through terracotta clusters in Rajasthan, bamboo-timber homes in Sikkim, palm-leaf artisans in Kerala, and community commons in Chhattisgarh. One story is deeply personal: the director’s mother, whose regenerative practices shaped the director’s own circular worldview long before her professional work in sustainability. With poetic narration, immersive visuals, and grounded research, the film reframes circularity as a lived tradition, not a future policy aspiration.
https://www.instagram.com/drpurvatavri
https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-indias-circularity
