Stopping the climate crisis is a question of political courage, and the clock is ticking. To the End captures a historic shift in climate politics in the United States, through the interwoven narratives of four young women of color who are key players behind the Green New Deal.
Rachel Lears is a documentary director, producer and cinematographer based in Brooklyn, NY. Rachel’s most recent feature documentary, KNOCK DOWN THE HOUSE (Netflix), follows four women who ran insurgent congressional campaigns in 2018, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Cori Bush. The film won the US Documentary Audience Award and the Festival Favorite award at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival, was shortlisted for an Oscar and is nominated for an Emmy in 2020. Her last feature, THE HAND THAT FEEDS (co-directed with Robin Blotnick; PBS), won numerous festival awards and was nominated for an Emmy in 2017.
Sabrina Schmidt Gordon is an award-winning documentary filmmaker and impact strategist from NYC. Her latest film, QUEST, is a New York Times Critic’s Pick and nominated for numerous awards including an Independent Spirit Award, a Peabody, and two Emmys. Sabrina’s directing debut was the Emmy-nominated BADDddd SONIA SANCHEZ, which she co-directed, co-produced, and edited, winning the Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color award at the African Diaspora International Film Festival in 2016. She is also the co- producer and editor of DOCUMENTED, the story of Pulitzer Prize-winning undocumented journalist, Jose Antonio Vargas. In 2018, she was inducted into The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Robin Blotnick produced and edited the Netflix documentary KNOCK DOWN THE HOUSE (winner of the US Documentary Audience Award and the Festival Favorite award at Sundance 2019) which follows four working class women who shook up the 2018 primary elections. His previous work as director and editor includes the award-winning documentaries THE HAND THAT FEEDS (2014, co-directed with Rachel Lears), about a bitter struggle for justice at a New York City bagel shop, and GODS AND KINGS (2012), about masks, magic and media in the Guatemalan highlands. His archival collage City of Movement is currently playing on infinite loop at the Museum of the City of New York.