![]() ![]() After helping secure 2015’s historic Paris Climate Conference agreement with some last-minute behind-the-scenes horse-trading, we see Gore among the crowd of celebrating world leaders. But Gore, as the film shows it, is the one with the ideas, the gumption, and the connections to grease the wheels of change.īut what happens when Superman saves the day? One shot resonates far beyond the movie. Other politicians, from Obama to John Kerry to Justin Trudeau, drift into the film, lending their support. Gore is depicted as a one-man army, fighting the good fight against impossible odds. In his personal and professional life, he appears deeply and tragically alone - often literally stranded in the film’s composition.Īn Inconvenient Sequel often plays out like a tragic superhero film. Gore seems peerless in his battle against global warming, for better and also for worse. At one point, Gore invites the cameras into his home, and they capture a man alone in an empty house, musing over photographs and notes from a different life. Bush in the 2000 election, in particular, is grist for the film's few jokes. However, as a documentary about the loneliness of would-be-President Gore, An Inconvenient Sequel is awkwardly engrossing. An Inconvenient Truth formed the choir, and it’s inexplicable that this sequel makes no effort to teach that choir to sing. In that way, it's a missed opportunity for Gore and his multi-decade agenda. Nor does it lay out actionable strategies for viewers who could be persuaded to change their habits, but don't know how. The film doesn't offer any surprising updates on global warming for a pseudo-woke teen with a social-media stream. And what exactly Gore trains these men and women to do, beyond monologue in public spaces, is unclear. Al Gore travels across the globe, educating trainees, who we barely get to know. is it good?Īs a call to recruit and energize a new generation of environmentalists, no, it's not good. The life of Al Gore, a button-up-wearing superhero (supported by a crack team of smartphone-wielding millennials) who will save us from global warming even if he alone has to fistfight the sun. Their weapon: the truth! What's it really about? What's it about?Ī decade after An Inconvenient Truth spotlighted the grave threat of climate change, former Vice President Al Gore returns with a new PowerPoint presentation that will recruit an army of environmentalist lieutenants, who themselves will assemble enviro-militias across the globe. Superhero tragedy disguised as end-times environmental doc. The newer, brisker, and unexpectedly more optimistic follow-up doc seeks, in large part, to calcify Gore’s legacy, resulting in a split-minded film that’s more fascinated with the former politician’s daily life than the melting polar ice sheets. The original film mobilized a generation of climate activists, won an Oscar, and sent the former vice president on a decade-long-and-counting PowerPoint tour. An Inconvenient Sequel, directed by Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk, and starting a limited American theatrical run on July 28th, is a follow-up to the 2006 documentary An Inconvenient Truth. A version of this review originally ran on January 20, 2017, in conjunction with the film’s premiere at Sundance.Īl Gore didn't invent the internet, but going solely off his latest film, viewers might assume he singlehandedly launched the modern fight against climate change. Welcome to Cheat Sheet, our brief breakdown-style reviews of festival films, VR previews, and other special-event releases. ![]()
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