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The Cove

Released 2009
Runtime 92
Category Documentary
Language English
Director Louie Psihoyos

What it’s about

In the scenic Japanese coastal town of Taiji, dolphin hunting is a lucrative trade, as locals have become the world’s leading suppliers of the sea mammal, ostensibly for meat and aquarium shows. Animal trainer-turned-activist Richard O’Barry (“Flipper”) travels with a crew of experts and underwater photographers to the heavily guarded cove — where the herding and slaughter of kindly, intelligent bottlenose dolphins is an annual ritual, performed under a veil of secrecy — to film the massacre.

Why we love it

Gorgeous, nerve-wracking, and extraordinarily shocking, “The Cove” is a work of heroic documentary filmmaking, as Psihoyos trails O’Barry on his (illegal and dangerous) quest to observe the mass killing of dolphins — an event he believes the public ought to see and ponder. Part National Geographic-grade underwater odyssey, part poetic elegy, “The Cove” is a beautifully shot and compelling film with the edgy tension of a thriller that asks tough questions about habitat destruction as well as the impact of mercury levels on human health, uncovering as many mysteries as it sets out to solve.

Richard OBarry Louie Psihoyos

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