The Ozone Factor
“The Ozone Factor” directed by Dana Plays, is a short YouTube compilation film that examines the causes and impact of climate change impacting the planet earth. Narrated by an influential environmentalist researcher Dr. Sterling Bunnell, Jr. (1932-2015) recorded in 1990. Ahead of his times he discusses things relevant to the changes in the planet occurring and peaking now. The goal of the project is to bring awareness of these issues positive change to promote positive change in ways that could save the planet. The causes are explored, but presented with solutions such as exploring bio-diversity in the foods humans eat, restoration of species facing extinction, emissions controls on smokes stacks, elimination of non-native invasive species in island flora and fauna, and/or wild ideas like bringing back the wooly mammoth through bioengineering and DNA breeding with a surrogate Indian Elephant to create a new food source, and more.
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Dana PlaysDirectorThe Longest Walk, Urban Estuary, Demise of Sugar, Love Stories My Grandmother Tells
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Sterling Bunnell, Jr.Key CastNarrator
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Project Type:Documentary, Short
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Runtime:19 minutes 41 seconds
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Completion Date:October 4, 2024
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Production Budget:400 USD
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Country of Origin:United States
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Language:English
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Shooting Format:Digital
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Aspect Ratio:16:9
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
Bio of Dana Plays
Dana Plays is an award winning, American film director known for her documentary, narrative and avant-garde works that interweave personal themes. Plays utilizes a experimental approach to her work, weaving a rich landscape of imagery, that combines metaphor with iconography creating poetic resonance.
Dana Plays, born in Baltimore, Maryland, is a filmmaker most known for her award winning documentary and experimental films that have shown widely throughout the world. She picked up her first camera at the age of 9 on a holiday vacation in the West Indies. She began serious study of photography at 15 years of age, when she learned to shoot with a 35mm SLR camera, developed negatives and printed her own work. She subsequently moved to the San Francisco Bay Area where she was awarded two fine arts degrees from the California College of the Arts (Bachelor and Master of Fine Arts), and launched her career as a filmmaker and digital artist. Enmeshed in the fine art scene of the San Francisco Bay Area, Plays produced a series of experimental films, that she shot and edited herself, a proponent of hands on approach to foster ones own vision.
Plays' filmography consists of 31 works in film and digital video, consisting of documentaries, experimental films and installations. Her work has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art: Color of Ritual, Color of Women, Avant-Garde Women Filmmakers of the Twentieth Century and more than 50 international film festivals, including Edinburgh, Montreal Nouveau, and Seattle International Film Festivals. Her films have garnered more than 25 film festival awards including the prestigious First Prize Jurors' Choice Award at the Black Maria Film and Video Festival for Nuclear Family; Tom Berman Award for Most Promising Filmmaker at the Ann Arbor Film Festival for Zero Hour; Best Experimental Film at the Houston International Festival for Across the Border; and Best Documentary Award at the New Orleans Film Festival for Love Stories My Grandmother Tells, which also was broadcast on VPRO, a Dutch national television network. Since 2005, Plays has had national awards and exhibitions including a Black Maria Film Festival award; a solo retrospective in Boulder, CO, at First Person Cinema, the longest standing American showcase for independent film; a digital installation of her piece Salvage Paradigm, at the Play Space Gallery, in San Francisco; a digital installations of and her video montage of Hollywood films situated in the Los Angeles River, River Madness, at the Skirball Center in Los Angeles. Plays serves on the board of directors of Canyon Cinema, in San Francisco.
Plays, professor of Film and Media Arts, and Women's Studies, at The University of Tampa has taught all aspects of film and digital production and studies since 1990, with previous teaching appointments at Syracuse University and Occidental College. At The University of Tampa, Plays teaches experimental, documentary and narrative filmmaking, world cinema, independent film and video, and women's studies.
"The Ozone Factor" is an experimental compilation documentary that pays tribute to Dr. Sterling Bunnell, Jr. a brilliant man who brought important issues to the fore re-amplifying his voice, and bring his words in to dialogue. Aa an essay about the ecology and other issues, the goal of the project is to bring dialogue around these issue to promote positive change.
This narrational track provides an essay approach to documentary, a similar film editing strategy used in Demise of Sugar (2015), an award-winning documentary that addressed the transformation of the sugarcane industry to tourism in the 1960 and the history of the Caribbean Islands, also produced and directed by Dana Plays. The film includes original nature footage (filmed by Dana Plays), along with archival material from public domain sources.
Significance: "The Ozone Factor" sheds light on important and timely issues of ecology and the environment and pays tribute to the life of Dr. Sterling Bunnell, Jr. who was in many ways ahead of his times.
Aims: The goal of the project is to bring dialogue around these issue to promote positive change.