71'
2024
Paolo Casalis
biography, road-movie, climate change
English, Italian, German, French, Korean,
Danish, Dutch, Spanish, Catalan Produzioni Fuorifuoco
Italy Produzioni Fuorifuoco / World
Streaming/Download: Available NOW on streaming/download platforms
What would you sacrifice to save the planet?
Gianluca Grimalda, climate researcher, is the first employee ever fired for having refused to catch a plane for environmental reasons. He did an act of civil disobedience to save 5 tons of CO2 and to raise awareness on the causes of climate change.
Was it worth it?
"Shot by Grimalda himself on his smartphone, with direction from Paolo Casalis, the film is engaging and easy to watch. Moments of border tensions are balanced with humour from unexpected encounters. The film succeeds in drawing the audience into an Alan Whickeresque journey, demystifying foreign landscapes and cultures while fostering camaraderie
with those he meets."
Nick Breeze, The Ecologist
LONG SYNOPSIS
“After refusing to fly, climate researcher loses his job.”
Below the New York Times headline is a selfie of a 50-year-old man aboard a pirogue plying the tropical sea, his intellectual goggles contrasting with his Indiana Jones hat.
By the time the news detonates globally from the pages of The Guardian and The New York Times on Oct. 13, 2023, Prof. Gianluca Grimalda, an environmental researcher at Kiel University, Germany, has been involved in filming for “The Researcher” for a year.
Six months earlier, Grimalda had traveled for 40 days to reach Papua New Guinea, the site of his research, filming the 28,000 kilometers he traveled and the dozens of trains, buses, trucks, cabs, ferries and cargo ships that, emitting ten times less than a single, comfortable air trip, made him save 3.5 tons of CO2.
And when, after six months of research in the remotest villages of New Guinea, the University intimates that he must return to his professorship within five days (i.e., by implication, get on a plane) he says no, becoming the first worker fired for refusing to fly.
An environmental activist and member of Scientist Rebellion, Grimalda gave up everything - an enviable career and salary, the relationship with his girlfriend, family affections, and a job he loved beyond all else - to raise the alarm about the now desperate condition of the planet, to provide an example and, perhaps, a possible way out.
In this film of travel, of adventures, of individual moral principles and universal crisis, there is undoubtedly something crazy.
It remains to be seen whether madness is in The Researcher’s action or in its viewers’ everyday behaviour»
FILM REVIEW
From The Ecologist Travel, Truth, and Rebellion: One Scientist’s Journey to Walk the Talk
By Nick Breeze
Travel, Truth, and Rebellion: One Scientist’s Journey to Walk the Talk Last November, I participated in a panel discussion following the screening of The
Researcher at the Films For Future Festival in Zurich, Switzerland. Gianluca Grimalda’s
documentary follows his research trip to Papua New Guinea, using low-carbon travel
methods such as buses, boats, and hitchhiking. His refusal to fly back at his employer’s
request led to his dismissal from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.
Jack Kerouac Meets Whicker’s World The Researcher takes the viewer on the road with Grimalda as he traverses complex
geopolitical borders en route to PNG, encountering a cast of characters who reveal how
closed off much of the world remains.
Shot by Grimalda himself on his smartphone, with direction from Paolo Casalis, the film is
engaging and easy to watch. Moments of border tensions are balanced with humour from
unexpected encounters. The film succeeds in drawing the audience into an Alan Whicker-
esque journey, demystifying foreign landscapes and cultures while fostering camaraderie
with those he meets.
Disaster Strikes While conducting research in PNG, Grimalda is instructed by his employer to fly back to
Europe. He refuses and is subsequently fired. He then embarks on a long, alternative
route home, extending the adventure with further twists and turns.
Although widely reported in the mainstream media, the film offers a broader
perspective—one that evokes nostalgia for exploration and the unknown. Grimalda also
highlights an important truth: the people he meets are not distant strangers but welcoming,
hospitable individuals, eager to help a lone traveller. That aspect of humanity left the
deepest impression on me.
None of this changed the outcome—he was still sacked, and his return to Europe became
a low-budget, overland odyssey. Though he has since won compensation from the Kiel
Institute through the courts, the question remains: is that closure?
Aligning Values with Actions
Grimalda’s experience underscores the need to align values with actions. He is now calling
for a global scientists' strike, stating:
“It would be the first time that scientists go on strike to protest the fact that writing reports
is meaningless if these reports are ignored.”
The Actions of Experts Matter Grimalda’s stance reminded me of research conducted by Professor Kevin Anderson et al.
in 2021, which found that expert actions influence how the public perceives risk and their
own behaviour.
The study suggested that if more researchers lived in line with their findings—adopting
low-carbon lifestyles and calling out high-consumption habits, particularly among
elites—policy and societal behaviour would be more likely to align with the targets of the
Paris Agreement.
On the perception of academics using activism to highlight their research, Grimalda
argues:
“Most scientists think that if they took this kind of radical action, they would lose their
credibility. But on the other hand, studies say exactly the opposite—that people believe
more in scientists who, so to speak, walk the talk.”
Grimalda is no stranger to protest and has been arrested for non-violent civil disobedience
in efforts to raise awareness about the worsening climate emergency. When I interviewed
him for the podcast, he explained:
“I wanted to put not just my articles, but my body in front of this catastrophic future that we
and future generations are going to face.”
Where to Watch & Listen The Researcher documentary is now available for paid download on platforms including
YouTube and iTunes.
You can also listen to my full interview with Grimalda on YouTube and all major podcast
channels.
Below: Gianluca Grimalda talks about his participation in the film
THE RESEARCHER is the second chapter of The Apocalypse Trilogy: The Preacher, The Researcher, The Survivors
The author would like to thank Gianluca Grimalda
- for his enthusiastic participation in the project
- for the commitment with which he learned, from scratch, how to make video footage and content, equipping himself with tools and technical knowledge
- for the trust and total openness to his own most personal and intimate dimension
- for the perseverance and involvement he put in making hundreds of hours of footage
Without the work, passion and dedication of Gianluca Grimalda, this film simply would not have been possible
"Married you have a sorrow, to never feel any sweetness that is not everyone's".
- David Maria Turoldo
"Shot by Grimalda himself on his smartphone, with direction from Paolo Casalis, the film is
engaging and easy to watch [...] It succeeds in drawing the audience into an Alan Whickeresque journey.".
- Nick Breeze, The Ecologist
FILM FESTIVALS & AWARDS
Blue Planet Future Festival 2024, South Korea
Suncine 2024, Barcelona, Spain
Films For Future, Zurich, Swiss
CinemAmbiente 2024, Turin, Italy
Los Angeles-Italia FIlm Festival, USA
Janakpur International Film Festival, Nepal
BUZZ IFF Bazau Film Festival, Romania
Matsalu Nature Film Festival 2024, Estonia
Clorofilla Film Festival 2024, Italy
Festival del Cinema di Cefalù, Italy
Ojo Móvil Fest, Lima, Perù