NOW AVAILABLE ON NETFLIX IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND

Follow the Rain

new feature documentary from Planet Fungi

World famous fungi hunters invite audiences on a unique expedition into the wilderness of Australia, where the symbiotic dance between fungi, plants and animals, unlocks nature's greatest secrets.

What’s in the film?

In an endangered forest in Australia, fungi hunter and acclaimed fungi photographer Stephen Axford, spies an intriguing frosty blue mushroom. He discovers it has no name. No one knows where it fits in the Kingdom of Fungi. He is the first to document it for science. 

Turns out this mushroom is one of the two million – eleven million species of fungus that scientists think could exist but have not yet been identified.

The science of fungi has been a neglected frontier of discovery.

Today there is a mass myco-awakening where we are only just starting to understand how important fungi are to life as we know it and how critical they are in protecting us from the impacts of climate change.

The race is on to document as many species of fungi as possible, as fast as possible.

At the forefront of this push internationally are Stephen Axford, and his partner in life and all things fungi, filmmaker Catherine Marciniak.

In Follow the Rain, Stephen and Catherine follow in the path of the rain to document the fungi that emerge.  Their mission – to find out how fungi fit into the world of living things.

It is an exploration of the world of fungi as you have never seen it – combining a decade of research and passion, Stephen and Catherine’s mesmerising fungi time-lapses and footage, and the most incredible fungal stories.

This fungi adventure takes us to some of Australia's oldest landscapes to explore the critical role fungi play on Earth.

It includes a journey into the world of zombie fungus hunting, a dig into the hidden trading deals between fungi and trees, a 10-year investigation to name a new species and an exposé of the rain-making fungal life of a desert.

The audience also goes behind the scenes into Stephen and Catherine’s time-lapse studio, sharing in their discoveries as fungi unfurl.

The evocative score by composers Romano Crivici and Carla Thackrah layers the story with magical fragile harmonies and powerful rhythms, creating a vast primal soundscape.

Visually captivating, a symphonic treat and incredibly entertaining, this pioneering fungi safari unearths the foundation of life downunder.

About Planet Fungi

We are Stephen Axford and Catherine Marciniak of Planet Fungi. For over a decade, we have been documenting fungi in photographs and videos across Asia and Australia.

You may have seen our time-lapses of fungi growing in David Attenborough's Planet Earth 2 or featured in the Netflix documentary Fantastic Fungi. Or perhaps you recognise some of Stephen's macro photographs from international nature journals.

You can check out what we do on Instagram and YouTube - @Planet_Fungi.

We document fungi because humans are only just starting to understand how important fungi are to life on our planet and how critical they are in protecting us from the impacts of climate change. We realise now that without fungi, the world as we know it would not exist - forests would not exist, and we would not exist. Now the push is on to document as many species as possible, as fast as possible. Raising awareness about fungi is critical to achieving that goal.

“Without fungi there would be no forests”

— Stephen Axford, Photographer & Presenter