CARBON NATION - A New Documentary On Climate ChangeAugust 10, 2011
Gravitas
On Demand Weekly provides new movie reviews of hot movies on demand from the POV of watching from the comfort of your home. Today’s review: CARBON NATION (Gravitas Ventures).
CARBON NATION - A New Documentary On Climate Change
By Scott Zaretsky
I have to admit, I’m a little “documentary filmed–out” these days. The thought of sitting thru and screening a “climate change” film after a day at the “office” wasn’t quite the movie-mojo I had signed up for. That said, I found Award-winning director Peter Byck’s CARBON NATION to be the best film on climate change I have ever seen.
You might laugh aloud thinking … well if you’ve “seen one, you seen ‘em all” … and I saw AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH --- while eye-opening, it wasn’t exactly exciting. CARBON NATION is engaging, funny, daunting and most importantly, non-preachy all packaged nicely with production value, great aesthetics, and good all-around rhythm and flow.
Folks, the bottom line is that we have a problem with the environment whether you believe it or not. You don’t even have to question glaciers melting and what’s the cause (as that debate gets boring after five minutes), you can just ask the question … can I get useful, everyday survival stuff like gas and electricity for less without taxing the environment?

With narration by Bill Kurtis and appearances that include NY Times columnist Thomas Friedman, VIRGIN Group CEO Sir Richard Branson, Former CIA Director James Woolsey and several Energy CEO’s and environment afficianados, the film is filled with hope and optimism rooted in solutions not problems. Traveling across the country and hearing stories from the “Red State” folk makes you realize very quickly that we are not as divided a country as we may think, but somehow, the media and Washington like to play the division game.
CARBON NATION is a film that celebrates the solutions that are out there, the inspiration that exists and the action that people are taking. It’s a movie that has no political affiliation, is purely non-partisan and quite frankly, inspiring enough to think about a career change - “going green” is good for business a the film points out. Green is good and Green is profitable.
Tom Shadyac’s I AMJanuary 04, 2012
Gravitas
On Demand Weekly provides new movie reviews of hot movies on demand from the POV of watching from the comfort of your home. I AM.
I AM
Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem
By Kris Scheifele
The 'I am' in this film's title is not a twist on the Cartesian cogito ergo sum. I AM gets its name from a response to a question posed to G.K. Chesterton, a British writer who died in 1936. The London Times asked him to write an essay in response to the question, "What is wrong with the world?" Chesterton's essay was brief; he wrote, "I am." This documentary asks the same question, and the one that logically follows, "What can we do about it?" By posing these questions, Tom Shadyac, I AM's director, enters the conversation about competition, material excess, and separation. He also finds what's right with the world — cooperative community, conservation, and compassion.

This is Shadyac's debut as a documentarian, but you may know him from a few little ditties like ACE VENTURA: PET DETECTIVE and THE NUTTY PROFESSOR. Some years back, Shadyac's blind feasting on comedy gold's robust bounty was interrupted by an accident which left him with post-concussion syndrome. The months of physical and emotional suffering made him notice some things outside his Hollywood bubble. Recuperating at home he says, "I saw AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH again. I see more news about the war in Iraq and I see poverty and I keep thinking that these are not the problems, there's a poison underneath." Shadyac also noticed that all his achievements and monetary success had not brought him happiness. (What's that? Money can't buy happiness?) The way he describes it, his illness forever shifted his priorities and the role he wanted to play in life.
It's hard to be critical of a film with high-minded aims, especially when it's blessed by Oprah. However, despite Shadyac's claim that the film is his story, it really isn't. It's another doc dealing in generalities, albeit noble ones. The story of Shadyac's transformation bookends the film: we get a brief glimpse of the conditions which inspired the film, and at the end, we find out that he traded in his mansion and all his high-end crap for modest digs in a mobile home community and biking to work.

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