I watched the documentary after having read the book Cries of the Savannah (Tidwell 2021). I liked it. Liked the way it moved forward. Hope a followup happens. Like the book, Cries of the Savannah, there are many threads, variables, issues, dangers that go into keeping a community and the ecosystem healthy and viable (in the analysis). Too many today have a simplistic view, soundbite view, of things -- a sorry way to look at complex situations as the effort for making oneself "competent in the literature" in order to think critically on a subject is abdicated. (I had read another review, simplistic, on an obscure movie review website and wondered if the person even watched the film or understood living in a wild or harsh area much less had bothered to do a literature review on the subject of conservation and helping small rural communities. Parsimony and "keep{ing} it simple stupid" have applicability, but "simple" is not "simplistic".)
I highly recommend the documentary.