Article 6929R The Mushroom Speaks review – an eccentric, awe-struck ode to fungi

The Mushroom Speaks review – an eccentric, awe-struck ode to fungi

by
Phuong Le
from Science | The Guardian on (#6929R)

Director Marion Neumann not only pays tribute to the magic of mushrooms but claims they could save humanity from the coming climate apocalypse

At once earthy and magical, fungi not only link us to the origins of life itself but also open doors to alternate realms of consciousness. In Marion Neumann's loose-limbed documentary, just the latest in a string of films that opine on its enigma, the mushroom can even save the world.

Compared with the surreal time-lapse photography of Louie Schwartzberg's Fantastic Fungi (2019) or the rustic charm of Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw's The Truffle Hunters (2020), Neumann's approach is more free-wheeling and eccentric. Interviews with a wide host of fungi lovers - who include scientists, culinary specialists and devoted enthusiasts - delve into the generative power of mushrooms with vigour and optimism. Considering that the cultivation of fungal cultures has allowed us to ease our physical ailments as well as repair damaged ecosystems, the film posits that, beyond a transactional relationship, humans can also model our behaviours after the virtues of the mushroom. Mycelium, the word that describes the thread-like structure of fungal colonies, is often brought up, suggesting that humanity should aspire to such interconnectedness in the face of increasing ecological disasters.

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