NPR

'Trophy' Asks Hard Questions About How To Save Wild Animals

The movie, opening this week, portrays the stark cruelty in trophy-hunting — and reveals hard realities about wildlife conservation in Africa, says anthropologist Barbara J. King.
An armed private security team patrols amongst some of John Hume's 1,500 rhinos at Buffalo Dream Ranch, North West Province, South Africa in April 2016. The image is a still from <em>Trophy</em>, directed by Shaul Schwarz and co-directed by Christina Clusiau.

How can wildlife conservationists best work to save endangered wildlife like the rhinos, lions and elephants of Africa?

This question sits at the heart of Trophy, a movie directed by Shaul Schwartz and co-directed by Christina Clusiau that opens in New York on Friday and more widely at the end of the month (see the trailer here).

With stunning and often startling cinematography, in places ranging from South Africa and Zimbabwe to Las Vegas convention centers, Trophy presents diverse viewpoints about the relationship between wildlife conservation and the commodification of big-game animals. The "if it pays it stays­­­­­­­­" model takes center stage: Should the sale of horns sawed off from farmed rhinos be legal? Should the practice of rich clients paying tens of thousands of dollars to hunt animals like the lion — who,

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