Tuesday Video: Trailer for “The Bay,” an eco-horror film that opens in Spokane this Friday
There is nothing that’s going on the Chesapeake Bay that can’t be corrected. It’s not an unknown disease, we know all of the contributing factors, so how do we aggressively try and fix it?
It’s 40 percent dead now. We don’t want it to become 55 or 60 percent
dead because then the economics will turn against you. The chicken
industry of course says that cleaning it up will cost jobs, but even
with that we still have time to find answers.
As a filmmaker, I have the obligation to entertain an audience. But I
can also pose questions. The facts are what make this movie more
captivating at a certain level.
TakePart: In real life similar isopods have grown to two-and-a-half
feet long and tried to chew through a submarine, thinking it was a
whale carcass.
Barry Levinson: That’s the thing, 85 percent of the stuff in the film
is factual. That isopods have moved from the Pacific to the Atlantic
is true, though they haven’t moved into the Chesapeake…yet. That we
are throwing the whole male/female relationship in the marine world
out of whack by polluting it, is true. The water filtration system in
this country is broken, that is true. There are all kinds of things
happening in the bay due to chemicals dumped into it so that we are
playing with a toxic soup.
Read the full story HERE .
* This story was originally published as a post from the marketing blog "Down To Earth." Read all stories from this blog