Glasgow Times

AN IN CONVENIENT SEQUEL: TRUTH TO POWER( PG )***

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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

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