Our Land

2026 • 1h 30m • Documentary

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Availability

Virtual

  • Available Worldwide except GB, IE

In-person

  • Available Worldwide except GB, IE

Language

English

Closed Captions

English

Audio

English (Audio Description)

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About the film

A journey over the walls that divide us, to explore the age-old debate of land and power, amid the fight for greater access to nature.

Our Land dares to trespass where few have trespassed before, in a modern retelling of the history of England’s Land and our access to nature, where we follow the communities fighting to shape its future. Our film seamlessly juxtaposes the two sides of the debate, giving voice to the different perspectives - those campaigning for greater access to the countryside and the landowners whose long history as custodians places them as ‘the protectors of Nature’.  

Looking to our history, as well as to the future, the crosses the divide, opening up the debates around the future of access, custodianship and conservation, heard from both sides of the fence.

Stay Engaged

Our Land Website

Director

Orban Wallace

Producer

Charlie Phillips, Rebecca Wolff, Leo Smith

Crew

Robert MacFarlane, Daniel Inzani, Jamie Wolfeld, +1 more

Awards & recognition

CPH Dox

European Premiere

Sheffield DocFest

World Premiere

Doc NYC

North American Premiere

What people are saying

Our Land review – right-to-roam campaigners offer bacchanalian antics and a heartfelt message Orban Wallace’s documentary avoids big clashes between landowners and campaigners in favour of wide-ranging exploration ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Peter Bradshaw

The Guardian

Orban Wallace’s superb documentary Our Land, which examines the idea of the public’s right to roam... offers a sharp look at the debate on access and ownership over the English countryside in this engrossing documentary. ⭐⭐⭐⭐

David Jenkins

Little White Lies

Our Land is informative and uplifting. Prefaced by elegant animation by May Kindred Boothby and ravishingly shot by Jamie Wolfeld. ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Jonathan Romney

Financial Times

A film that dares to step off the path of the usual 'us and them' narrative plaguing progress on a Right to Roam in England.

Francesca Donovan

The Great Outdoors

Gallery

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