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Becoming Cousteau – Information & Trailer

‘BECOMING COUSTEAU,’ THE CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED FILM FROM NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOCUMENTARY FILMS, TO BEGIN STREAMING NOVEMBER 24 EXCLUSIVELY ON DISNEY+

Documentary From Academy Award® Nominated Director Liz Garbus Shines a Spotlight on the Iconic Environmentalist and Filmmaker 

BURBANK, Calif. (November 17, 2021) — Disney+ announced today that “Becoming Cousteau,” the acclaimed National Geographic Documentary Film on the iconic French explorer from Academy Award®-nominated director Liz Garbus, Academy Award®-winning producer Dan Cogan, producer Mridu Chandra, and Story Syndicate, will premiere on the service exclusively Wednesday, November 24th.

The film had its world premiere at the 2021 Telluride Film Festival and went on to win the Grierson Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 2021 BFI London Film Festival and the Critic’s Choice Documentary Award for Best Science/Nature Documentary. “Becoming Cousteau” debuted to critical acclaim theatrically on October 22nd.

Capt. Jacques-Yves Cousteau was one of the 20th century’s great explorers, a filmmaker and beloved adventurer who documented the exotic wonders below the ocean with pioneering equipment that yielded a Cannes Film Festival-winning film, two Academy Awards®, and a pair of iconic and long-running television shows, “The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau” and “The Cousteau Odyssey.” His work became synonymous with life in the sea and on his famous boat, the Calypso. He authored over 50 books on his aquatic life and invented the Aqua-Lung, advancing the boundaries of scuba diving. Yet, it was as an environmentalist that Cousteau would have his most lasting impacts, alerting the world about the warming oceans decades before the climate crisis made headlines. Instrumental in protecting Antarctica and taking part in the first Earth Summit, Cousteau’s insight into what needs to be done for the planet continues to inspire generations.

Jacques Cousteau films an underwater shipwreck in the Mediterranean Sea in 1943. (Credit: The Cousteau Society)
Jacques Cousteau films an underwater shipwreck in the Mediterranean Sea in 1943. (Credit: The Cousteau Society)

In creating the film, Garbus poured through 550 hours of archival material and rarely-seen footage to let Cousteau’s films, words and recollections tell his own story. “Becoming Cousteau” shines a spotlight on the man many grew up worshipping, yet most actually knew very little about. After prospecting for oil companies to support his globe-trotting adventuring, he had a late-in-life awakening and became the first great advocate for ocean preservation. Cousteau led a somewhat fractured family life, checkered with great loss, but he remained true to his one great love — the sea.

“Jacques Cousteau was an adventurer and inventor who became a passionate environmentalist later in life” said director Liz Garbus. “He was not born a protector of the seas — it was something he grew to appreciate as he witnessed  the undersea world changing before his very own eyes. I hope Cousteau’s incredibly entertaining, epic life shows how much we can all evolve in life and in our attitude towards our place on the Earth. Cousteau is a true hero for our age, and his life story points the way to a better future.”

Over 100 hours of audio journal entries, interviews and observations from collaborators and crew members add to this inside look at Cousteau. The documentary also chronicles his first wife and collaborator Simone Melchior (known aboard the Calypso as “The Shepherdess”), his family experiences, his second wife Francine Triplet, the creation of The Cousteau Society and the crucial work they do, and his evolution into one of the most important environmental voices of the 20th century, whose words and images are more vital today than ever.

“Becoming Cousteau” is produced by Academy Award® and Emmy Award® winner Dan Cogan (ICARUS, “The Apollo”), Mridu Chandra (“Out In the Night”, “Electoral Dysfunction”, “Cured”), Academy Award® winner Evan Hayes (“Free Solo”) and Story Syndicate, a New York-based film and television production company founded by Garbus and Cogan in 2019. The company specializes in premium nonfiction content and currently has upwards of 21 films and series in development and production with premium distribution platforms including National Geographic, Hulu, Netflix, HBO, Apple, Amazon, FX, Discovery and others.

National Geographic Documentary Films previously released the Academy Award®, BAFTA and seven-time Emmy Award®-winning film “Free Solo” and the Academy Award®-nominated film “The Cave.” Other critically acclaimed films under the banner include Ron Howard’s “Rebuilding Paradise”; Sundance Audience Award winners “Science Fair” and “Sea of Shadows”; Emmy® winners “LA 92” and “Jane,” both of which were included in the top 15 documentaries considered for an Academy Award in 2017; and Dupont Award winner “Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS.”

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