Los Angeles Times

The lives affected by coal

- — Sheri Linden

As indicated by the phrase “war on coal,” frequently deployed in the political arena, coal has become a charged emblem of the American political divide. On one side, a vision of the glory days of a thriving industry and jobs; on the other, a rising awareness of the environmen­tal fallout from the most polluting form of energy on Earth.

Documentar­ian Michael Bonfiglio doesn’t suggest there are easy solutions, but with “From the Ashes,” he explores alternativ­e-energy options that are already producing results and especially promising training programs for former coal workers. The latter initiative­s, he points out, would lose their federal funding in the current administra­tion’s proposed budget.

Crucially, Bonfiglio listens to some of the working people — outraged, mournful and resilient — whose lives have been affected by coal. They include West Virginia miners left high and dry by their bankrupt employers in what were essentiall­y company towns and Dallas residents struggling with pollution-related asthma. He finds strange bedfellows: miners aligned with management against federal regulators, and the “cowboys and Indians,” as one pleased Montana rancher puts it, who joined forces to defeat a proposal for what would have been the nation’s largest coal mine.

There’s nothing particular­ly cinematic about the well-crafted film, but it’s a compelling piece of advocacy journalism, one that looks beyond the sloganeeri­ng on all sides of the debate.

“From the Ashes.” Rating: PG, for thematic elements and some language. Running time: 1 hour, 22 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

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