Conservation Films

Food Sovereignty Documentary

Food sovereignty is the right of communities to define their own food systems. The film is how that right is exercised.

Food sovereignty movements are building an alternative to an industrial food system that has extracted from rural communities, displaced traditional food cultures, and concentrated agricultural power in ways that harm both land and people. A documentary captures those specific alternatives — the community gardens, the indigenous seed keepers, the urban farms, the food cooperatives — and the communities who are building food sovereignty block by block, field by field.

We work with food justice organizations, indigenous food sovereignty initiatives, community land trust farms, urban agriculture networks, and rural communities reclaiming food production capacity. The documentary approach centers the communities and the specific food practices that define food sovereignty for each group — honoring the diversity of approach that the food sovereignty framework protects.

Food sovereignty documentaries are used by advocacy organizations for policy campaigns, by food justice funders for donor cultivation, by academic institutions for public education, by communities building solidarity networks with other food sovereignty movements, and by media organizations covering the food system transformation.


One production day.
Four deployable assets.

Primary Film
8–20 minutes

The complete land story — for donors, conservation partners, policy advocates, and aligned investors.

Fundraising Cut
3–5 minutes

Built for grant applications, investor meetings, and major donor presentations. Evidence-forward, mission-led.

Consumer Short
60–90 seconds

Optimized for social and direct market customer engagement. Emotional, specific, shareable.

Full Archive
Activated Vision

Every production frame AI-tagged and searchable in your private client portal. Yours to use indefinitely.


Common questions

Through deep pre-production engagement with community leadership — building the story framework collaboratively and returning drafts for community review before final production. We understand that the story belongs to the community, not to us.

Yes. Multi-community productions that show the diversity of food sovereignty approaches are powerful for advocacy and coalition-building — demonstrating that these are not isolated experiments but a broad movement.

By humanizing the policy stakes — showing what food sovereignty looks like in practice and who benefits when policy supports rather than undermines community control over food systems.

Free resource

The Regenerative Storytelling Playbook

A framework for land-based enterprises that need their story to travel — across consumers, investors, and community audiences, from a single film strategy.

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Our Work

Work made to be watched.