Joaquin Phoenix ‘Drowns’ In Oscar-Worthy New Film Release
For Immediate Release:
14 February 2013
Contact:
Ben Williamson +44 (0) 20 7837 6327, ext 229; [email protected]
London – Joaquin Phoenix is drowning. In a rare appearance outside his award-winning films, the Oscar nominee is featured in a brand-new PETA UK video that shows him underwater, panicking and struggling to breathe. As the text explains, “In water, humans drown just as fish suffocate on land. It’s slow and painful and frightening. … Put yourself in their place. Try to relate. Go vegan”. The video, which was shot by top photographer Michael Muller, is available here.
Capitalizing on the buzz surrounding Phoenix’s critically acclaimed performance in The Master, PETA US sought to place the ad during the Academy Awards, but US television network ABC deemed the video to be too political and controversial to run during the broadcast.
“I was 3 years old – to this day it is a vivid memory”, Phoenix says of the moment he connected human suffering with animal suffering. “My family and I were on a boat, catching fish. As one fish was caught, he was writhing, then he was thrown against the side of the boat. You couldn’t disguise what it was. This was what we did to animals to eat them. The animal went from a living, vibrant creature fighting for life to a violent death. I recognised it, as did my brothers and sisters.”
Biologists have found that fish develop relationships with each other and even grieve when their companions die. Some fish are capable of using tools, while others gather information by eavesdropping. These intelligent, sensitive animals are so good-natured that Dr Sylvia Earle, the world’s leading marine biologist, has said, “I wouldn’t deliberately eat a grouper any more than I’d eat a cocker spaniel”.
In addition to garnering an Academy Award nomination, Phoenix’s work in The Master landed him a BAFTA nomination as well as an award from the Venice Film Festival.
Broadcast-quality video footage of Phoenix’s video can be downloaded here. For more information and to view the video, please visit PETA.org.uk or click here.