Read A Review of The Film 'A Plastic Ocean' To Practise and Improve Your Reading Skills
Read A Review of The Film 'A Plastic Ocean' To Practise and Improve Your Reading Skills
Read a review of the film 'A Plastic Ocean' to practise and improve your reading skills.
Film______________________________________________________________
Pollution___________________________________________________________
A Plastic Ocean
A Plastic Ocean is a film to make you think. Think, and then act. We need to take action on our
dependence on plastic. We've been producing plastic in huge quantities since the 1940s. Drink
bottles, shopping bags, toiletries and even clothes are made with plastic. 1) _____. What happens to
all the rest? This is the question the film A Plastic Ocean answers. It is a documentary that looks at
the impact that plastic waste has on the environment. Spoiler alert: the impact is devastating.
The film begins as a journey to film the largest animal on the planet, the blue whale. But during the
journey the filmmakers (journalist Craig Leeson and environmental activist Tanya Streeter) make
the shocking discovery of a huge, thick layer of plastic floating in the middle of the Indian Ocean. 2)
_____. In total, they visited 20 locations around the world during the four years it took them to make
the film. The documentary premiered in 2016, and is now on streaming services such as Netflix.
It's very clear that a lot of research went into the film. There are beautiful shots of the seas and
marine life. 3) _____. We see how marine species are being killed by all the plastic we are dumping
in the ocean. The message about our use of plastic is painfully obvious.
4) _____. In the second half, the filmmakers look at what we can do to reverse the tide of plastic
flowing around the world. They present short-term and long-term solutions. These include avoiding
plastic containers and 'single-use' plastic products as much as possible. Reuse your plastic bags and
recycle as much as you can. The filmmakers also stress the need for governments to work more on
recycling programmes, and look at how technology is developing that can convert plastic into fuel.
We make a staggering amount of plastic. In terms of plastic bags alone, we use five hundred billion
worldwide annually. Over 300 million tons of plastic are produced every year, and at least 8 million
of those are dumped into the oceans. 5) _____. Once you've seen A Plastic Ocean, you'll realise the
time is now and we all have a role to play.
Task 1 Match the missing sentences with the correct place in the text (1–5).
6. It's not too late to _____________________________ the tide and fix the problem.