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The Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital (DCEFF), the largest environmental festival in the world and the longest direction in the U.S., returns on March 12 and runs until March 22. exceeding the course of the festival, more than 100 films will be screened at 25 alternative locations approaching Washington, D.C., including museums, universities, embassies, libraries and theaters. This year, National Geographic is snooty to continue its long-standing partnership gone DCEFF, hosting influential films and thought-provoking panel discussions approaching impending environmental issues. Screenings at National Geographic count the world premiere of "Jane Goodall: The Hope," which picks stirring where 2017's "Jane" left off and explores Dr. Goodall's animated legacy; "Okavango: River of Dreams," the additional film by internationally famous plants photographers and National Geographic Explorers-at-Large Dereck and Beverly Joubert, which had its world premiere at Sundance; "Last Wild Places," an inspirational record of hopeful conservation stories from Malawi, Montana, Argentina and Mozambique; and "Rebuilding Paradise," Ron Howard's additional documentary exploring the aftermath of the wildfires that ravaged Northern California in tardy 2018. Attendees can also experience National Geographic content in a variety of ways, including a virtual authenticity exploration to look the wild chimpanzees that inhabit the lush, dense forests of Tanzania's Gombe National Park and a "Protecting Canada's Waters" happy hour thing where guests can enjoy a drink even though exploring Canada's diverse and astonishing rivers, lakes and coastlines. This year's programming emphasizes the power of storytelling to illuminate the admiration of our world and how each individual can and should be a steward of the environment. It is now more important than ever to receive act out to guard our planet in order to celebrate the Earth and its resilience for years to come. DCEFF will also normal exceeding 150 filmmakers and special guests, including some big names in the world of environmental policy, science, conservation, entertainment and public health. Many of these guests will be on hand for enlightening post-screening discussions and audience Q&As, exploring environmental topics in greater depth. Names of those in attendance will be announced higher in February. In accessory to National Geographic, major locations include, Landmark's E Street Cinema, AFI Silver, the National Museum of Natural History, Carnegie Institution for Science, American University, Eaton DC and merged embassies approaching the city. Tickets and more recommendation can be found below. About the Environmental Film Festival The Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital (DCEFF) is the world's premier showcase of environmentally themed films. back 1993, our mission has been to celebrate Earth and inspire concord and stewardship of the character through the power of film. Each March in Washington, D.C., we host the largest environmental film festival in the world, presenting 100+ films to audiences of more than 20,000 and collaborating gone exceeding 110 partners, including museums, embassies, universities and theaters. The festival is one of the leading annual cultural comings and goings in Washington, D.C., with the 2017 Mayor's Arts rave review for Excellence in Creative Industries. The Wild Bird Trust are burning to adjudicate that we are launching the Wild Bird disorder blog site, and as such we will be migrating off of the National Geographic Society's Newsroom platform effective immediately. The Wild Bird Trust will be making additional investments in advertising the additional site and hope to build a map-based photo-sharing platform by the stop of the 2020 where we will constantly display all of the "Top 25 Wild Bird Photographs of the Week". Thank you to everyone that has shared this epic journey gone us. There are now exceeding 1 million partners on the Wild Bird Trust Facebook Page, making it one of the most well-liked birdwatching pages in the world. We would gone to receive this time to thank the National Geographic organization for hosting exceeding 200 editions of the "Top 25 Wild Bird Photographs of the Week", and we look dispatch to higher plants and birding collaborations. Thank you to all the photographers who accept their pretty bird photographs on a weekly basis to our Facebook Page. You are getting your astonishing wild bird photographs onto Facebook pages approaching the world and are creating an preparedness just about the beauty and variety of plants in the wild across all continents. Thanks another time to National Geographic! Getting to this dwindling would have been impossible without you. To the future! Here is to a additional decade of stunning wild bird photography!