Geography of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill

Set in the coastal village of Nanwalek during the aftermath of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, this powerful short film captures the voices of community members who lived through one of Alaska’s most devastating environmental disasters. Villagers recall the months spent cleaning vital subsistence sites like Port Adam and English Bay—areas essential not just for survival, but for culture, tradition, and connection to the land. The story weaves personal memory with community resilience, showing how a village once reliant on the ocean for food was forced to shift toward store-bought supplies. With haunting reflections on lost access to trusted resources, The Summer Everything Changed is a moving exploration of disruption, recovery, and enduring ties to place.

Classroom Guide

Workshop Info

See Stories led film workshops with youth in six Prince William sound communities in 2016 (Cordova, Whittier, Nanwalek, Tatitlek, Valdez, and Chenega Bay) with generous funding and support from the Prince William Sound Science Center (PWSSC). The PWSSC wanted to support youth to create films on their communities' profound and changing relationship to the ocean 25 years after the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS). The films created during these workshops focus primarily on vibrant cultural and personal connections to water, and some of them explore the tragedy of EVOS and the long-standing impacts that ripple through to the present moment.

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Land Acknowledgement

This video was filmed on Dena'ina Land. Learn more about land acknowledgements at native-land.ca.