The celebrated short film White Grass captures the changing lives of the nomadic people of the Mongolian steppe by following the story of a 10-year-old girl named Munkhjargal (or Mogi) who has a passion for horses. The South Korean-born, Los Angeles-based filmmaker Justin Kim WooSŏk follows Mogi as she trains for a race leading up to Naadam – a centuries-old Mongolian festival featuring competitive horse racing, wrestling and archery. The changing nature of life in Mongolia permeates the story. Extreme cold-weather events known as dzuds have grown more intense and frequent due to climate change, putting at risk the nomadic herding lifestyle that has persisted on the steppe for millennia. And while Mogi’s father and coach is proud that she is the family’s first female racer, he wonders if she’ll ultimately pursue a life in the city, away from her beloved horses.
Director: Justin Kim WooSŏk
Producer: Ruby Lanet
video
Computing and artificial intelligence
The ‘cloud’ requires heaps of energy to stay aloft. Could synthetic DNA be the answer?
12 minutes
video
Art
A puppeteer makes sense of an overwhelming world by shrinking it down to size
5 minutes
video
History
There are fragments of Romani Gypsy history all over the UK – if one knows where to look
3 minutes
video
Biology
Brilliant dots of colour form exquisite patterns in this close-up of butterfly wings
3 minutes
video
Genetics
Why it took a century to work out that humans interbred with Neanderthals
22 minutes
video
Art
The sprawling mural that depicts an unflinching people’s history of Los Angeles
7 minutes
video
Personality
A ‘dumpster archeologist’ reconstructs strangers’ stories via what they’ve discarded
14 minutes
video
Human rights and justice
An unarmed Indigenous group aims to protect their native lands in this stirring portrait
15 minutes
video
Art
In his poem ‘London’, William Blake crafted a bleak vision of the city he loved
9 minutes