Love and Bannans: An Elephant Story [via Kayoko Mitsumatsu]


Filmmaker Ashley Bell and world renowned Asian elephant conservationist Lek Chailert in the documentary, "Love & Bananas: An Elephant Story."

“Love & Bananas: An Elephant Story,” the new documentary from actress Ashley Bell, has the potential to be life-changing –  for viewers and, in turn, for the endangered Asian elephants who are the subjects of this powerful movie.

In case you don’t have the attention span to read this whole article, let me get the big message of the film out there right now: Every single elephant who gives rides to tourists or performs in any kind of show has been tortured physically and emotionally in ways that, if you have one drop of compassion and humanity, will give you nightmares.

Bell, who is passionate about elephants, raced to Thailand with a camera crew to document the rescue of Noi Na, a 70-year-old partially blind trekking elephant, by Sangdeaun Lek Chailert and her team. Chailert was named TIME Magazine’s Hero of Asia and honored by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as one of six Woman Heroes of Global Conservation.

Rescuing Noi Na meant bringing her 500 miles across Thailand – in the back of a truck – to the Elephant Nature Park, which Chailert founded as a sanctuary.

Along the way, Bell discovered the shameful truth about how elephants are trained to give rides and perform in circuses. That process, in which a baby elephant is taken from its mother, put in a confined cage called a crush box and beaten until its spirit is broken, is far more savage than any of the horror movies in which Bell has starred.

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