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  1. Two first time film-makers stop their lives to make a film about the rhino poaching crisis in South Africa. Carving out six months for the project, Susan Sco...

  2. In “Stroop,” two filmmakers explore the war for rhino horn. Initially setting out on a six-month project, the duo leave their jobs, sell their homes, move in with their mothers and give up nearly four years of their lives to document not just the rhinos but the various people connected to this iconic animal.

  3. In this roller coaster ride between continents, two first time filmmakers embed themselves on the front-lines of the rhino genocide where they are witness to...

  4. There is no question that the tragic subject matter is worth telling. However, in the drive to cover all the aspects of rhino horn trafficking in a feature length documentary, many of the items inevitably fail to escape a frustrating superficiality. Review by Steven ★★★ 1. Really good expose on the subject. I hate that I'm caught up ...

  5. In Africa and Asia, two filmmakers embed themselves on the front-lines of a species genocide when they are given exclusive access to the enforcement aspect of the war for rhino horn. From rangers, pilots and K9 units patrolling national parks to elite police units raiding wildlife trafficking dens... they find themselves in some hair-raising situations.

    • 2 min
    • 169
    • An Organic Conversation
  6. The South African wildlife crime documentary STROOP - journey into the rhino horn war, by director Susan Scott and television presenter Bonné de Bod, scooped...