Harefield Gazette

MAKING OUR WORLD A GRETA PLACE...

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I AM GRETA (PG)

I★★

N 2018, a 15-year-old Swedish climate change activist delivered a stirring speech at a United Nations conference in Katowice, Poland.

“You are not mature enough to tell it like it is, even that burden you leave to us children,” she scolded the attending dignitarie­s.

Her stony-faced, sobering summation – “You have run out of excuses and we are running out of time” – sparked one simple question: Who is Greta Thunberg?

Film-maker Nathan Grossman claims to have the answers in his polished documentar­y, which follows the teenager over the course of 12 months when her life became something akin to a

Greta with her father Svante blockbuste­r film.

“A very surreal movie because the plot would be so unlikely,” quips Greta in voiceover.

Slickly assembled and politely intrusive, I Am Greta isn’t the warts’n’all portrait that the title might suggest but an affecting and reverentia­l study of a girl with Asperger syndrome, rudely dismissed by one American news commentato­r as “a mentally ill Swedish child who is being exploited by her parents and the media”.

Early footage from Stockholm in August 2018, before the speech, shows Greta sitting on the pavement opposite the parliament building with a handmade sign – School Strike For Climate – and pamphlets detailing her cause.

“Adults say one thing and do something completely different,” she laments as other schoolchil­dren join her movement, giving birth to the hashtag #FridaysFor­Future.

Scenes between Greta and her omnipresen­t father Svante are the most touching, particular­ly when he pleads with her to make time in their gruelling schedule to eat.

She repeatedly refuses, determined to share her message as loudly as possible.

“Once the climate crisis has gotten your attention, you can’t look away,” she argues.

Greta is clearly uncomforta­ble with the prospect of heightened media interest.

“No one will know who you are,” Svante assures his daughter as they leave the conference centre in Poland.

“That’s nice,” she replies sweetly, oblivious to the global media storm that will quickly engulf them both.

For the most part, Grossman’s film retains a respectful distance with brief glimpses of Greta’s school graduation ceremony and video calls to her mother.

One of the few occasions when reality bites takes place on a sailing yacht in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean as Greta records an audio diary during her emissionsf­ree journey from Portsmouth to New York.

“I don’t want to have to do all this,” she tearfully confides as waves crash against the monohull. “It’s too much for me.” For those few seconds, Greta is visible in her truest and most relatable form: a frightened girl at the mercy of a natural world she hopes to protect, who simply wants to be at home with her dogs Moses and Roxy.

So, who is Greta Thunberg? I’m still not sure.

Special screenings take place nationwide on Sunday with an exclusive Q&A.

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 ??  ?? Greta Thunberg pictured during a climate change protest
Greta Thunberg
Greta Thunberg pictured during a climate change protest Greta Thunberg

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