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VIPA Wadee (VIPAว่าดี) recommends the Here Now Project, a documentary that does not simply tell a story but “places us inside it”—through real mobile phone clips from ordinary people worldwide. A cry for help inside a flooded subway in China, an entire town consumed by fire in Canada, or a child in Kenya with nothing to eat because locusts devoured the entire field. If you still think “global warming” is something distant… after watching this, you will surely think again.
Global Boiling, Month by Month
The documentary takes us on a time-machine journey back to 2021: from Texas, where a snowstorm caused massive power outages, to the first cyclone in Indonesia, to a giant red dust storm swallowing Brazil, and to sudden floods in Germany that no one saw coming. Every clip is a warning cry from nature sent across the globe. It is not merely “bad news”—it is the “real lives” of people facing disaster.
Ordinary clips become the sound of catastrophe.
This documentary has no narration, no interviews—only raw images that need no explanation: laughter masking fear, tears in the darkness, and the repeated words, “I have never seen anything like this before.” There are footages that turn a small mobile phone into crucial evidence that the world is collapsing right before our eyes.
Is this a signal… or the final warning?
The Here Now Project is not a documentary that tries to sell drama or ask, “Is global warming real?”
Instead, it is shouting at us: “How long will you just stand by and watch?”
This is not an apocalypse movie—it is a record of a world in pain. The film is filled with power, emotional resonance, and inspiration to awaken us to confront humanity’s shared crisis. Because in the end… we are all in the same situation, and it may be too late if we do nothing.
▶ Watch the documentary THE HERE NOW PROJECT
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An aspiring reviewer who wants to share stories from the voice within.