AN IN CONVENIENT SEQUEL: TRUTH TO POWER( PG )***
A FEW minutes into Jon Shenk and Bonni Cohen’s tub-thumping sequel to the Oscar-winning 2006 documentary An Inconvenient Truth, it becomes apparent that there is one renewable energy source the world has yet to harness.
It is a steady, irresistible thrum that won’t destroy the ozone layer, and could power the planet for decades: former United States vice president Al Gore’s boundless determination to prick consciences about the effects of global warming.
The avuncular messiah of the modern age loudly bangs a drum for action and words on climate change, spreading his message during a turbulent period of political upheaval including the election of Donald Trump, who lambasted global warming as a “very expensive hoax” and withdrew the United States from the Paris climate accord. “With all these new threats, there’s never been a more important time to speak truth to power,” Gore sombrely observes, providing a snappy subtitle for the sequel.
Like its predecessor, the film incorporates segments from Gore’s slide-show lectures, which have been updated with scenes from Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines and flooding in Florida, the state which denied him the keys to the White House in the 2000 election against George W. Bush.
There’s no sense of lip-smacking Schadenfreude as Gore wades through water-logged streets and engages with local dignitaries.
Breathtaking footage of the statesman atop a rapidly melting glacier in Greenland are intercut with snappy soundbites that anoint Gore as the lone voice of reason capable of deviating us from self-destruction.
Aside from lionising Gore, the sequel is blessed with scenes of undeniable emotional power.
His 24-hour reality broadcast on November 13, 2015 in Paris is interrupted by shocking news of suicide bombings and shootings in the French capital, including an assault on the Bataclan theatre.
Gore stands before the largely French production crew and delivers a heartfelt pledge of solidarity.
These simple, unscripted words resonate clearly and remind us of the undeniable power of strangers, from different cultures and backgrounds, to pull together in pursuit of a common goal - our survival. Running time: 98 mins Directors: Jon Shenk, Bonni Cohen