OVERLAND DOCUMENTARY PROJECT

OVERLAND is a feature-length documentary film about the adventures of a cast of falconers set in bewitching cultural and natural landscapes around the world.  Amidst rapidly modernizing societies and dwindling wilderness, our falconers search for a sense of identity through a primal connection with a bird of prey; a creature incapable of love, hate, or compromise.  The ancient bond between falconer and bird, 6,000 years in the making, is formed on a single, fragile, thread…trust. 

Meet the filmmakers, go behind the scenes, and see why this project is so exciting to us in this short crowd-funding piece. 

Directed and Produced by Revere La Noue and Elisabeth Haviland James Executive Producer: Christopher Behlau Cinematographers: Benjamin Pritchard and Andreas Burgess Sound Recordists: Jaxx Monteath and James Payne Making of Cinematography: Christopher Behlau UAE Producers: Saluki Media (c) 2015 The Falconbridge Collection, LLC

You can make a tax-deductible donation to our production via our fiscal sponsor here. 

 

Here is a peek from our 6-day development shoot in United Arab Emirates.  

http://www.seedandspark.com/studio/overland-2 DONATE TO THIS PROJECT Filmed on location at the North American Falconer's Assocation in Kansas, November 2015 Directed and Produced by Elisabeth Haviland James and Revere La Noue Executive Producer: Christopher Behlau Cinematographer: Andreas Burgess Sound Recordist: James Payne Camera Assistant: Nick Timmons (c) 2015 THE FALCONBRIDGE COLLECTION, LLC

Here is a peak from our 6-day development shoot in United Arab Emirates.  Please consider donating to our UAE Production

TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR PROJECT AND DONATE: www.seedandspark.com/studio/overland-2 Introduction culled from development filming in the United Arab Emirates (c) 2015 THE FALCONBRIDGE COLLECTION, LLC Directed and Produced by Elisabeth Haviland James and Revere La Noue Executive Producer Christopher Behlau Director of Photography Ben Pritchard Made possible by the support of the Bridging Cultures Through Film program of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the North Carolina Arts Council