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telling stories. challenging systems. building a new future for filmmakers.
Wild Commons was built to challenge the outdated distribution models that dominate documentary filmmaking. This blog explores the stories, communities, and characters behind our films, while examining how independent filmmakers are building a new future for environmental storytelling.
Featured posts
The True Story Behind Bluebird Man: How Ordinary People Helped Bring Bluebirds Back
Discover the remarkable conservation story behind Bluebird Man and learn how thousands of citizen scientists helped restore bluebird populations across North America.
The Channel Island Fox: one of America’s Greatest COnservation COmebacks
The Channel Island Fox nearly disappeared from California’s Channel Islands in the span of a single decade. The Little Fox of Limuw examines the ecological collapse that drove its decline and the extraordinary conservation efforts that brought this unique species back from the brink.
What PHIR BHI Reveals About wildlife coexistence
As human-wildlife conflict intensifies across the globe, PHIR BHI (EVEN SO) offers a rare and deeply hopeful story about coexistence. Set in Gujarat, India, the film explores how local communities live alongside mugger crocodiles, revealing the fragile relationships that allow humans and predators to share the same world.
Meet the team - Kika Tuff, Ph.D.
Before becoming a filmmaker, Kika was a scientist studying deforestation. But after years researching a problem the world already knew how to solve, she had to accept that data alone rarely changes human behavior. Here, Kika reflects on her transition from science to filmmaking, and why emotional connection is a critical tool for confronting ecological collapse.
Why Diving for Rays Is the Film We Need Right Now
Diving for Rays follows Nicole Woodbyrne’s journey into marine conservation, revealing why LGBTQ representation in science matters now more than ever. As rights face renewed challenges, this film shows how visibility shapes who belongs—and who gets to dream of a future in science.
Done Waiting for Permission: A Filmmaker Manifesto
Documentary filmmakers are taught to wait—for festivals, distributors, and approval that may never come. But the tools to share your work already exist. Time to be done waiting and start building a new model for distribution—one rooted in ownership, audience, and collective momentum.
The Future of Documentary Film Distribution: Why Filmmakers Are Taking Control
For decades, documentary film distribution followed a familiar path: film festivals, sales agents, broadcast deals, and—if you were lucky—a streaming platform acquisition. But today, that model is rapidly evolving.
Why Science and Nature Filmmakers Are Choosing Wild Commons for Distribution
For filmmakers, the challenge isn’t telling meaningful stories—it’s finding where those stories belong. Here’s why more filmmakers are choosing to publish their work within a collective designed specifically for science and nature storytelling.
How to Produce and Share Your Nature Documentary (Without a Traditional Distributor)
The path to making a nature documentary has changed. Today’s filmmakers can not only produce their own films, but distribute them on their own terms—reaching audiences directly and sustaining their work over time.