Windsor Star

Gore follows up Oscar-winning documentar­y

Gore credits Trump’s ‘wild statements’ for an upsurge in environmen­tal activism

- BOB THOMPSON

If Al Gore needed a 21st-century, climate-change villain, Donald Trump obliged with his actions and “wild statements.”

The controvers­ial U.S. leader fulfilled his bad-guy role by withdrawin­g his country from the Paris Agreement on climate change this year and labelling the accord harmful to the economy.

So the release of the former U.S. vice-president’s followup documentar­y An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power, seems more vital than ever to environmen­talists.

“We didn’t plan that or intend it, but it has worked out that way,” said Gore in Toronto promoting the movie with backer Jeff Skoll, Participan­t Media head honcho.

They had teamed up for the Oscar-winning 2006 documentar­y An Inconvenie­nt Truth, which educated audiences on the imminent threat of climate change using Gore’s comprehens­ive slide show. Not only did it motivate activism, the movie earned a surprising US$49.8 million world wide.

The sequel is a more personal Gore effort framed by directors Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk. But the former presidenti­al candidate says he hopes the impact’s just as pivotal, especially in the age of Trump.

“There’s a law of physics that sometimes becomes a cliché in politics and it goes like this, and you’ve heard it,” Gore said. “‘For every reaction, there is an equal and opposite reaction.’ The reaction to Trump’s wild statements and actions have included the biggest environmen­tal upsurge and action that I’ve ever seen.”

When Skoll and Gore met a few years ago to discuss the sequel possibilit­y, they were more interested in updating the climate-change situation and revealing some positives.

“A new story had evolved,” Skoll said. “That’s how quickly the prices had gone down to give us a viable economics on clean energy.”

Gore agreed, echoing what he says in the latest film: “It’s taken a long time, but now the changes are coming so quickly from solar and wind, the electricit­y for renewables is cheaper than fossil fuels in so many places ... the solutions are available.”

An Inconvenie­nt Sequel does come with lots of climate-change warnings, too. More intense typhoons, hurricanes, floods and storms are creating catastroph­ic havoc. Extreme downpours called ‘rain bombs’ decimate areas even as wildfires and droughts displace whole communitie­s.

As global-tour guide, the smooth-talking Gore shows up in the aftermath of disasters or while they occur, and he’s even profiled with friends, references family and gets emotional at his leadership conference­s past and present.

“Having them follow me around for two years was an interestin­g experience made enjoyable by the fact that we all became good friends,” said Gore of the directors Cohen and Shenk and their crew.

“But honestly, when I saw the first rough cut of the movie, I was so surprised by some of the footage they had captured.”

In one sequence, Gore offers his condolence­s to a French crew filming him just before the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference in Paris and shortly after the terrorist attacks there.

“It was such a dramatic event, and more importantl­y, it became obvious two weeks later the very fact that tragedy had unfolded in the very city where the (climatecha­nge) negotiatio­ns were being prepared had a profound impact on the negotiatio­ns,” said Gore.

“The 150 leaders who came to speak, naturally offered condolence­s and then expressed solidarity. It was as if there was a shared recognitio­n; we need to use this to focus on how important life is and the choices we make.”

An ‘I-told-you-so’ sequence has Gore reminding us he was vilified for a computer simulation in An Inconvenie­nt Truth predicting a potential flood of Lower Manhattan, including the 9/11 memorial.

“The single most criticized scene was the animation,” Gore said. “Sure enough, after Super Storm Sandy (in 2012), it was flooded by the ocean water.”

Despite the “undeniable evidence” offered up, some other things have remained the same.

“The truth about climate change is still inconvenie­nt for the large carbon polluters and they still put their money in propaganda and spewing out false informatio­n,” Gore said.

It’s taken a long time, but now the changes are coming so quickly from solar and wind, the electricit­y for renewables is cheaper than fossil fuels in so many places ... the solutions are available.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Former U.S. vice-president Al Gore, left, seen with film backer and philanthro­pist Jeff Skoll, hopes to inspire audiences with his new documentar­y, An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power, a followup to his 2006 film, An Inconvenie­nt Truth.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Former U.S. vice-president Al Gore, left, seen with film backer and philanthro­pist Jeff Skoll, hopes to inspire audiences with his new documentar­y, An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power, a followup to his 2006 film, An Inconvenie­nt Truth.

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