A forest scene from The Old Forest documentary film
An ancient forest clearing at dusk, towering moss-covered trunks rising like pillars into a dense canopy, the ground layered with deep leaf litter and delicate ferns. In the center, a small portable projector beams a luminous rectangle of forest imagery onto a suspended, slightly wrinkled white sheet, its glow reflecting off bark and branches. Mist hangs low, catching soft, cinematic blue-hour light as the projector’s warm beam cuts through. Captured in wide, eye-level composition with strong depth, the mood is quietly majestic and hopeful, fusing past and present. Photographic realism emphasizes texture in bark and moss, conveying a sophisticated, documentary atmosphere of outdoor screening and reverence for the old forest’s history.

About The Old Forest

The Old Forest traces an 11-year story unfolding at a human pace, weaving present-day observation with buried histories to reveal how hope can take root, endure disturbance, and quietly reshape the landscapes we think we know.

Screenings

A long, narrow editing suite with a large ultra-wide monitor displaying a paused frame of an ancient forest canopy, dappled sunlight visible between branches. Surrounding the screen, sticky notes, timelines, and printed shot lists are pinned to dark acoustic panels, hinting at 11 years of captured seasons and stories. Subtle LED strip lighting glows along the desk edge, mixing with the monitor’s cool, cinematic light to illuminate a tidy array of headphones, external drives, and a calibrated color panel. Shot from a low, three-quarter angle with moderate depth of field, the composition leads the eye toward the glowing forest frame. The mood is focused and hopeful, reflecting the meticulous craft of documentary editing and preparation for festival screenings and distribution.

Premiere

Join us for the first public screening of The Old Forest, followed by a conversation about its 11-year journey.

A historic cinema auditorium with plush, deep-green seats arranged in gentle arcs around a slightly elevated stage. The large screen shows a still from an old-growth forest interior, shafts of golden light filtering through towering trunks, rendered with rich cinematic contrast. Ambient aisle lights trace soft lines toward the screen, while a subtle haze in the air makes the projector beam faintly visible. The color palette is muted and sophisticated, with warm wood paneling and dark acoustic walls. Captured from the back row with a wide lens, sharp focus throughout, the composition emphasizes anticipation and collective experience. The mood is reverent and hopeful, suggesting a special documentary premiere that connects past forest histories with a shared future.

Retrospective

Explore the film’s deeper historical threads with scholars, archivists, and the filmmakers in an intimate post-screening discussion.

A meticulously arranged distribution planning table in a minimalist studio, centered on a large, detailed world map printed on textured, off-white paper. Colored pins and thin red threads trace potential screening routes across continents, converging on symbols representing art-house cinemas and documentary festivals. Around the map lie neatly stacked Blu-ray cases with abstract forest imagery, a tablet paused on a digital screening calendar, and a sleek laptop showing analytical graphs. Soft overhead lighting combines with a single warm desk lamp, casting precise, cinematic shadows that emphasize the map’s relief and paper grain. Shot from a top-down, bird’s-eye perspective with crisp detail, the mood is strategic yet optimistic, conveying the thoughtful rollout of a hopeful forest documentary to audiences worldwide.
A time-layered forest floor composition: in the foreground, a freshly fallen green leaf rests beside a brittle, almost skeletal leaf from seasons past, both lying on rich, dark soil threaded with tiny roots. Nearby, a partially buried, cracked glass slide shows a sepia-toned image of the same forest decades earlier, its edges weathered. Subtle morning light filters through an unseen canopy, creating delicate highlights on moisture beads and a soft glow on the glass. Captured in extreme close-up with shallow depth of field, the background dissolves into velvety bokeh of greens and browns. The mood is intimate and quietly hopeful, a cinematic, documentary-style metaphor for 11 years of observation reaching back into deeper history.
A weathered 16mm film reel case, its metal surface softly scratched and labeled with fading archival stickers, rests on an old wooden editing table. Around it, neatly stacked canisters and a vintage lightbox with strips of translucent forest footage evoke years of careful documentary work. Cool, diffused studio light mixes with a warm desk lamp, creating a gentle chiaroscuro and subtle metallic highlights. Shot in cinematic, photographic realism from a slightly elevated angle, with shallow depth of field that blurs the distant shelves of tapes and boxes. The atmosphere is contemplative yet hopeful, suggesting an 11-year journey of filmmaking and discovery preserved in these tangible artifacts.

Host a Screening

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Will you attend?(required)

Responses

Rating: 5 out of 5.

A contemplative, visually rich film that left me unexpectedly hopeful about our relationship with land, time, and one another.

— Aya Nakamura

Rating: 4 out of 5.

The Old Forest lingers long after viewing, inviting you to notice small changes and long histories in the places you walk daily.

— Lila Patel

Rating: 4 out of 5.

An extraordinary 11-year commitment that reveals how patience and attention can turn quiet landscapes into gripping, deeply humane cinema.

— Mateo García

Rating: 5 out of 5.

I left the screening feeling grounded rather than overwhelmed, with a renewed sense that hopeful action is possible even in fragile ecosystems.

— Aya Nakamura

Visit us

123 Example StreetSan Franciso, CA 12345

Hours

Weekdays by appointment only

Phone

(123) 456-7890