The Guardian (USA)

Spaceship Earth review – 90s Arizona ecoexperim­ent looks like reality TV

- Peter Bradshaw

If ever a documentar­y was in tune with the spirit of lockdown it is this very absorbing film about Biosphere 2 – a colossal eco-experiment­al project in the Arizona desert in the early 90s, which had its roots in 60s countercul­ture and which I knew nothing about before this.

My ignorance was so complete, in fact, that for the first few minutes of this film I kept suspecting some kind of docu-spoof. But it’s all real, right up to the disclosure of a horribly familiar villain right at the end, whose identity it would be unsporting to reveal.

This is the story of the eccentric but charismati­c commune leader John P Allen, who ran a collective ranch in New Mexico, where in the 70s he met the rebellious young billionair­e Ed

Bass, who offered to put some of his family oil money at Allen’s disposal to realise one of his most cherished visions: building a gigantic biodomesty­le enclosed ecosystem, rather like the one in Douglas Trumbull’s classic sci-fi movie Silent Running. Here, they could conduct a two-year experiment with a group of people living behind glass, tending to the crops and plants.

The results of the Biosphere 2 experiment – Biosphere 1 being the Earth itself – would tell us about humanity’s ability to colonise planets using such a dome, and help to rebalance our relationsh­ip with the natural world back here on B1. To the fascinatio­n of the world’s press, the Biospheria­ns trooped inside the gleaming glass-andsteel structure in 1991, like astronauts getting on board a spaceship. Inevitably, relations between them frayed.

The air quality started to deteriorat­e. And they had not anticipate­d what might happen if one of them needed hospital treatment.

Yet the real Lord of the Flies meltdown happened afterwards. As a result, Bass called in the Wall Street bankers to evict the hippies and the free-thinkers from the Biosphere management, as part of a mission to repurpose it as a profitably “environmen­talist” tourist attraction.

The Biosphere 2 project now looks like reality TV, or maybe a conceptual art happening. Its quixotic extravagan­ce is rather amazing.

• Spaceship Earth is available on digital platforms and in cinemas from 10 July.

 ??  ?? Sealed in ... Biosphere 2 in Spaceship Earth. Photograph: Philippe Plailly/Science Photo Library
Sealed in ... Biosphere 2 in Spaceship Earth. Photograph: Philippe Plailly/Science Photo Library

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