• About
    • History
    • News
    • Team Members
    • Careers
    • Contact
    • Free Screening Series
    • Redford Center Productions
    • Approach
    • Redford Center Grants
    • Fiscal Sponsorship
    • Nature Connection
    • Environmental Fiction
    • Impact
    • Funding
    • Resources
    • Support Our Work
info@redfordcenter.org Donate
Donate
R
Features

Our Blue Home

Two filmmaker brothers set out on a global journey to uncover how regenerative aquaculture — from seaweed forests to fish farms — is restoring our oceans and reshaping the future of food. In every corner of the planet, they discover the farms, farmers, restaurants, chefs, and communities proving that the key to saving our seas lies in how we choose to eat.

In Our Blue Home, filmmaker brothers Oliver English & Simon English travel the world to uncover one of the most hopeful environmental movements of our time — regenerative aquaculture. And to explore the role humans must play in the ecological restoration of our planet, through food production.
Across six continents, they dive into underwater farms, coastal communities, and chef-driven kitchens that are reimagining the way we live with the sea. From visionary farms in Spian rebuilding ecosystems and habitat to kelp farmers in Maine capturing carbon through seaweed forests, to coral gardeners in Indonesia rebuilding reefs from the rubble — each story reveals how restoration and regeneration are already happening beneath the waves.

 

Guided by curiosity and cinematic storytelling, the brothers document not just the science behind these blue revolutions, but the human stories at their heart — the farmers, chefs, and local innovators turning crisis into creativity.

 

With breathtaking visuals, immersive underwater cinematography, and the brothers’ intimate, first-person perspective, Our Blue Home embodies their signature blend of exploration, science, and wonder. The series shows that the ocean is not only our greatest mystery — it’s also our greatest hope.

  • Oliver English

    Co-Director/Producer
  • Simon English

    Co-Director/Cinematographer
  • R

    Donate to this Fiscally Sponsored Project

    To make a donation by check in support of this project please write the name of the project on the memo line of check, or on accompanying letter, and be sure to make the check payable to: “Redford Center, Inc.” Checks can be mailed to: The Redford Center, PO Box 29144, San Francisco, CA 94129. To make a donation online using credit card please click on the “Donate” button below. If you would like to make a donation by Wire/ACH from your bank account, please reach out to us directly for instructions at fiscal@redfordcenter.org. The Redford Center's Tax ID is 46-4549706.

    Donate

    Support Stories that Move

    Join our community of donors and support the creation of impact-driven, change-making films. As a non-endowed, nonprofit organization, gifts of every size are meaningful and help build the personal and political will we need today to accelerate environmental and climate solutions.

    Donate Now
    Join Us

    We’re growing the community of passionate environmental storytellers and activists and we’d love for you to be a part of it. Subscribe to get our monthly newsletter, announcements, and exclusive screening access.

    • Watch
    • Work
    • Careers
    • Contact
    info@redfordcenter.org Donate Now
    • Privacy
    • Terms & Conditions
    The Redford Center is located on the unceded ancestral homeland of the Ramaytush Ohlone peoples. As the original stewards of this land, the Ramaytush Ohlone understood the interconnectedness of all things and maintained harmony with nature for millennia. We respectfully honor the Ramaytush Ohlone peoples for their enduring commitment to the earth.
    © 2026 The Redford Center, All Rights Reserved.
    R

    This is What Impact Looks Like.

    Our 2025 Impact Report shows how that chain of impact plays out: Our support helps filmmakers tell their critical stories, which sparks movements that ultimately have real-world impact.

    Read the Report →