Maine Film Center new virtual series launches with ‘Entangled’

WATERVILLE — The Maine Film Center has launched a new virtual series, Cinema in Conversation, where filmmakers, film experts, policymakers, and journalists from around the world converge on Zoom to discuss important films with the community.
The next event in the Cinema in Conversation series will take place at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30, and will be led by director and Boston Globe reporter David Abel. To view the film and register for the discussion, visit railroadsquarecinema.com/”>RailroadSquareCinema.com.
“Entangled,” (75 minutes) chronicles the efforts to protect North Atlantic right whales from extinction, the impacts of those efforts on the lobster industry, and how the National Marine Fisheries Service has struggled to balance the vying interests. There are now believed to be fewer than 400 right whales, making them among the planet’s most endangered species. The main threat to their survival, scientists say: millions of lobster lines that stretch from New England up through Atlantic Canada, standard gear for North America’s most valuable fishery. Exacerbating that threat is climate change, which has sparked a collapse in the whale’s food supply in the warming waters of the Gulf of Maine, forcing them to search for food in areas where they had rarely been seen before. As a result, their population has been plummeting. In recent years, deaths of right whales have spiked while births have fallen sharply.
In 2018, no calves were born — an unprecedented observation — while the previous year, a record 17 were found dead. In 2019, 10 right whales died, the second most ever recorded. NOAA officials say the population can’t sustain more than a single premature death a year. At the current rate of decline, scientists say the whales could go extinct within 20 years. Now, under pressure from lawsuits by environmental advocates to reduce right whale deaths, the federal government has been considering controversial regulations that pit the region’s politically powerful lobstermen against scientists and environmental advocates trying to save the whales. The proposed regulations, which could reduce lobster lines by half in much of the Gulf of Maine and harm the livelihoods of many lobstermen, has sparked a political backlash. The future of the iconic species hangs in the balance.
A slate of discussions over the coming months will consider a wide range of films: “In My Skin,” (director Anna-Sophia Richard, 2019); “La Llorona,” (director Jayro Bustamante, 2019)’ “Big Night,” (director Stanley Tucci, 1996); “Coded Bias,” (director Shalini Kantayya, 2020). Each discussion will be led by either the filmmaker or a film expert.