Latest News & Blog

Now Booking: Time & Water by Sara Dosa | LandxSea Monthly

This June, part of our LandxSea Monthly programme of powerful films about people and planet, we're screening TIME & WATER by award-winning director Sara Dosa (Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, FIRE OF LOVE, 2023). An epic, emotional personal story from the glaciers of Iceland. 

  • Now Booking: Time & Water by Sara Dosa | LandxSea Monthly

    This June, part of our LandxSea Monthly programme of powerful films about people and planet, we're screening TIME & WATER by award-winning director Sara Dosa (Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, FIRE OF LOVE, 2023). An epic, emotional personal story from the glaciers of Iceland. 

  • Now Booking: HEN | LandxSea Monthly

    LandxSea Monthly returns with György Pálfi's HEN from Conic films. 🐔

    Told entirely from the perspective of its avian protagonist, HEN follows a chicken who escapes an industrial farm only to find herself navigating the pecking order of a crumbling seaside restaurant in Greece.

  • Meet new LandxSea Trustee David Hughes!

    Get to know David Hughes, the second of our two new Trustees at LandxSea, joining us to support us on governance, strategy, and oversight, helping us steer the ship as we grow the festival.

  • Submissions Now Open for LandxSea Film Festival 2026

    We’re looking for compelling films exploring environmental challenges, innovative solutions, and the many ways people and nature shape one another. Whether it’s a gripping documentary, an artistic short, an experimental piece, or a powerful narrative, we're here for it 💚

  • Meet new LandxSea Trustee Nancy Dionne!

    We're delighted to introduce you to Nancy Dionne, the first of our two new Trustees for LandxSea, who will support us on governance, strategy, and oversight, helping us steer the ship as we grow the festival:

  • We're Looking for New Trustees and Committee Members

    We're looking for new people to help shape the festival.

    As LandxSea grows, so does our need for brilliant people to guide, support, and help steer the ship.

    We’re currently recruiting for two key volunteer roles: Charity Trustees and Festival Committee Members.

  • Now Booking! LandxSea Monthly: PAID IN BLOOD + Q&A

    Plus other recommendations for November in our community newsletter:

    Meet Angus-based director Byron Pace, in conversation with journalist Davy Shanks at our November LandxSea Monthly screening.

    In 2019, in a groundbreaking operation, Wildlife Vets Namibia partnered with Parc de la Vallée de la N'Sele and Mount Etjo to relocate an elephant family from Namibia to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

  • Our 2025 LandxSea Film Festival Programme is LIVE!

    It's finally here! After months of careful curation, passionate discussions, and far too much coffee, we're thrilled to unveil our most ambitious LandxSea Film Festival programme yet! Three days of cinema and community to spark your imagination, fire up your curiousity, and ignite your activist heart!

    Browse our films and events, and book tickets! 🎟️

  • Rivers & Tides: 25th Anniversary Screening on 18 August

    Can't wait until festival time? We have a fantastic treat for you in the meantime. Our August LandxSea Monthly screening at Montrose Playhouse is a very special, 25th anniversary screening of RIVERS & TIDES: Andy Goldsworthy Working with Time, by Thomas Riedelsheimer.

  • LandxSea Film Festival Opening Night: Lost for Words by Hannah Papacek Harper

    Ahead of our full programme announcement on 6th August, we're delighted to reveal our Opening Night film of LandxSea Film Festival 2025: The Scottish Premiere of Hannah Papacek Harper's debut feature documentary LOST FOR WORDS.

    An odyssey across the United Kingdom, Lost for Words celebrates our relationship with nature through diverse voices while actively reshaping our anthropocentric point of view with a poetic and scientific approach.

    Using Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris's bestselling book The Lost Words as inspiration, Lost for Words journeys around the UK exploring how communities connect with nature as the vocabulary we use to describe our environment is slowly being erased from our language.