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New ‘Wind in the Willows’ film trailer shows nature destroyed by road building and plastic pollution

'This country of nature lovers needs to give its wildlife every chance to survive, thrive and expand its range,' says Sir David Attenborough, who appears in new trailer

Josh Gabbatiss
Science Correspondent
Thursday 28 March 2019 03:46 EDT
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The Wind in the Willows trailer

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A film “trailer” for The Wind In The Willows calling for action to help nature has been unveiled by environmental campaigners.

Sir David Attenborough and Stephen Fry are among the talents featured in the film, which shows the animal characters facing 21st century threats such as road building and plastic pollution.

It marks the launch of a new celebrity-backed campaign by the Wildlife Trusts for a “wilder future”, which is calling on people to help UK wildlife recover from current declines.

The animation, which also stars Catherine Tate, Alison Steadman and Asim Chaudhry shows how the lives of Badger, Ratty, Mole and Toad from Kenneth Grahame’s classic tale are disrupted in the modern age.

In the trailer, which will be shown in cinemas and on social media, habitats have been destroyed, the river polluted, and Toad hangs a memorial picture of a puffin entangled in plastic on the wall of Toad Hall.

Sir David, president emeritus of The Wildlife Trusts, said it was “desperately sad” that so much of the country’s wildlife had been lost since The Wind In The Willows was written.

“We have damaged our rivers, built too many roads and lost too many ponds and meadows,” he said.

“All of this has happened because our systems and laws that should be keeping nature healthy are failing, and we are losing touch with wildlife. Everything is becoming disconnected.”

“This country of nature lovers needs to give its wildlife every chance to survive, thrive and expand its range.”

The Wildlife Trusts warn that in the century since The Wind In The Willows was written, many of the UK’s wild places and the plants and animals that rely on them have been lost.

Four-fifths of heathlands, which are home to sand lizards and nightjars, have been lost, 97% of lowland meadows which support flowers, insects, mammals and birds have vanished, and only a fifth of rivers are considered healthy.

Ratty, the water vole, has been lost from 94 per cent of the places where it was once found, while Toad has lost nearly 70 per cent of his own kind in the last 30 years alone, the conservationists said.

The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth, due to habitat loss from intensive farming, inappropriate development and the lack of strategic planning, and compounded by climate change, the Trusts said.

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The trailer aims to inspire people to contact politicians to call for strong laws to help nature recover, and to take action in their local area by volunteering or creating wildlife-friendly features in their gardens and neighbourhoods.

“I’ve acted in and narrated Wind In The Willows in the past but this version is different – it really, really matters,” said Fry.

“I adore what’s left of Britain’s wild and precious places and I’m a passionate supporter of my local Wildlife Trust which is restoring a huge part of the fens for nature.

“We all need to get behind The Wildlife Trusts, rise up and call for a wilder future – otherwise it’ll be too late to save Toad, Ratty and all the residents of the riverbank and beyond.”

Additional reporting by PA.

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