King Charles hopes nature film will 'inspire' viewers

King Charles believes he wants to inspire a "sense of vigilance" to protect the climate and reveal the need to "work with rather than against nature." According to the King's Foundation, a feature-length TV film titled Finding Harmony: A King's Vision will be shown on Amazon's Prime Video early next year.
The monarch said of the initiative, "Never has it been more important for the world to make a concerted effort to protect and prioritise our planet and restore our link with it." In the film, the King will reflect on his own decades of campaigning for environmental and social harmony.
The King said it was his "deepest wish" that the film would inspire a new audience to learn about the philosophy of harmony, and "perhaps spark the same zealous determination it has shown me to help build a more sustainable future." The King has appeared in a behind-the-scenes BBC film about the Coronation, but this will be a more unusual way to examine his beliefs.
"I've been trying to find and encourage methods we can work with rather than against nature for a large portion of my life," the King said. In other words, he said that "to restore balance to our planet, which is under such strain. The one-off documentary will explore how humans are "part of nature, not alienated from nature," and that a healthy relationship with nature is at the centre of human happiness. The documentary will showcase how harmony can be applied to agriculture, traditional craft skills, architecture, and town planning, with examples from around the world.
"I hope this film would bring just some of the world's best efforts to bring harmony into practice," the King said, "From Guyana's forests to sustainable communities in India—and, closer to home, the King's Foundation at Dumfries House and Highgrove."
Director Nicolas Brown said there was a mystery in understanding how the King's views on harmony had influenced his work. "Remarkably few people around the world know the full extent of the King's lifelong fight to bring nature and humanity into harmony," he said. The King's first harmony summit, which was held at Highgrove in Gloucestershire in July, was caught on their cameras. Indigenous people from around the world who shared their experiences of how communities could live in tune with the natural world were brought together in this forum. They celebrated their respects to nature as they joined the King at a fire ceremony at the start of the day. The King's thoughts on harmony and town planning have also influenced thinking about the construction of a new generation of new towns in England.
The King will be the first royal to appear on a subscription service as a result of his Amazon documentary. Prince William's departure from royal life was recently questioned by Eugene Levy on Apple TV+, and Prince Harry and Meghan were in a Netflix series about their departure from princedom. They have provided forums for the royals to voice their thoughts and opinions, but not in a traditional interview style. Kristina Murrin, the King's Foundation's chief executive, said the film would showcase the King of England's decades of sacrifice to peace in a way that was "both sad and encouraging to see."