I just got home from watching a late showing of a documentary that my friend had given as a choice of 3 films to see tonight. I wouldn't normally pay $14 for a movie of any kind, and certainly less likely for a documentary (what is netflix for, if not for documentaries!), but Le Sel de La Terre was an incredible film, and its subject, photographer Sebastiao Salgado, as fascinating as his photos and vision.
This man's collection ranged from nature to portraits to humanitarian disasters and back again. He lived for months with people in remote places, from Siberia to the Amazon Jungle, and has covered disasters over the decades, in Ethiopia, Kuwait, Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Congo, and living in refugee camps and in forests and cold damp floors to pursue the vision of social documentary.
Finally, this husband and wife team, who may have spend many parts of their married life apart, and before the era of internet or long distance phone technology, have worked alongside each other in many exhibitions and books, and culminate in an extra-ordinary act of creating the Instituto Terra, where they have literally reforested a swathe of deforested land, and are gaining back the rain forest in Brazil, now a park that can be marvelled at, most easily by watching this worthwhile film.
Beyond his work, the documentary flows easily in three languages, with the bulk of the film's narration being provided in french with a direct camera shot of the photographer himself, as he describes the photos and his memories of the people or place that they are from. He seamlessly weaves together a story that flows easily and you find yourself drawn to the stories he saw and told when he took these pictures. Completely unconscious of the camera his son uses to capture him on film, he lives entirely in the moment, knowing when he has the chance for a great photo and when it will have to wait.
This film is an Oscar nominee and a labor of love of a son for a father who shows his charisma and presence in the now at every moment. Find his books, google his images, and go see this film. You cannot miss it!