Everything's Cool:

Can a movie about global warming genuinely be called lighthearted? If so, Daniel B. Gold and Judith Helfand's "Everything's Cool" comes as close as one imagines possible, essaying yet more inconvenient truths about the potential future of our planet in the same buoyant, irreveren...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Weitere Verfasser: Gold, Daniel. B. (RegisseurIn), Helfand, Judith (RegisseurIn)
Format: Video Software
Sprache:Undetermined
Veröffentlicht: Québec VVS Films [o.J.]
Schlagworte:
Zusammenfassung:Can a movie about global warming genuinely be called lighthearted? If so, Daniel B. Gold and Judith Helfand's "Everything's Cool" comes as close as one imagines possible, essaying yet more inconvenient truths about the potential future of our planet in the same buoyant, irreverent style the filmmakers brought to their last activist docu, "Blue Vinyl." Given its arrival in Al Gore's footsteps and the sudden glut of media attention focused on the subject, pic may face a certain climate-change fatigue on behalf of the ticket-buying public, but should receive plenty of exposure from fests and small-screen docu broadcasters ... Gold and Helfand have a lot on their minds, and they do a generally good job of whittling down an unwieldy subject into an energetic 100-minute package that, like "Blue Vinyl," includes funky animated interludes courtesy of animators Jeremiah Dickey and Emily Hubley. Unashamedly partisan pic tends to drag and seem a tad dated only in those sections devoted to criticizing the government and "experts" retained by oil companies to refute climate-change science. [www.variety.com]
Beschreibung:[DVD] (94 Min.) dolby digital 2.0 stereo widescreen