An Inconvenient Truth Movie Review
An Inconvenient Truth Review
"An Inconvenient Truth" Overview

Rating: PG
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Davis GuggenheimProducer : Lawrence Bender,Scott Burns,Laurie David
Screenwiter :
Starring : Al Gore
We are all so going to die. Al Gore says so.
In the deeply scary documentary An Inconvenient Truth, Gore shows more
personality – and poses some even more devastating consequences – than he did
in his entire election campaign. The issue of global warming is clearly one
that is close to Gore's heart, as he took to the road after his failed
presidential bid on an international lecture circuit to raise awareness and
inspire action on the near-crisis levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
and the havoc they are already wreaking on the planet.
Essentially a filming of Gore's polished, straightforward, and compelling
lecture, Truth is pretty much the slickest, best-produced classroom filmstrip
you'll see at the local indie movie theater. It's at its most effective when
director Davis Guggenheim does not try to be something more artsy than an
educational tool and simply lets Gore's pictures and staggering number of
graphs of the assorted bar, line, and pie varieties do the razzle-dazzle for
him.
This is when Gore plainly explains how Earth is now home to levels of carbon
dioxide literally unmatched in the last 600,000 years, and how the numbers are
only going up. He does a great deal to show the damage this is already doing to
the planet, with rapidly rising temperatures, weather disasters, instances of
both flood and drought, new communicable diseases, and ecological patterns
having detrimental effect to plants, animals, and humans alike.
Interspersed with Gore's lecture, though, are brief segments on Gore-the-man,
instead of Gore-the-cause, and the fawning and obsequious tone does nothing to
strengthen his point. I do not need to be convinced by contemplative voice over
and what looks an awful lot like blatant Apple product placement that Al Gore
is just the bestest guy ever in order to be deeply swayed by his message.
Between these indulgent interludes and the sheer volume of the graphs and data
presented, it doesn't take long for Truth to feel like it's preaching to the
choir. Gore is convincing, sure, and he repeatedly casts global warming not as
a partisan issue, nor even as a political one, but as a moral imperative. But
between rehashes of the 2000 presidential election quagmire, repeated jabs at
the policies of the current administration, and the overt glorification of Gore
at his tree-hugging liberal best, Guggenheim does little to reel in the
disbelievers. By the time Gore gets to the misconceptions about global warming,
including how its reversal can potentially help the global economy and how
reports of its questionable veracity have been greatly exaggerated, audiences
who may have needed those misconceptions corrected will have long since walked
away or tuned out.
But let's face it: There's even less of a market for a red state-friendly
environmentalist documentary than there is for… well, an environmentalist
documentary, so perhaps Guggenheim should be forgiven for tilting left. What's
unfortunate is that it takes so long to get positive – Gore claims that he is
not trying to scare us, but I'm not buying it, what with the profoundly
disturbing truth of his statistics and images. He certainly scared the crap out
of me.
But what he doesn't do is offer me anything that can be done about it. The only
politicking Gore does is when asked what we should do about it, and he gives a
great call to action, but he doesn't give an answer. There is some hope offered
in the form of existing technology that can reduce our carbon output, but
frankly, this is a guy who was VP of the United States, and he wasn't able to
effect change. Now he's telling me to fix it by… recycling?
Yeah, we're all gonna ie.
Reviewer: Anne Gilbert



