The Guardian (USA)

Once You Know review – must-watch essay on climate change that tells us it’s already here

- Phil Hoad

Most climate-change documentar­ies sound pre-emptive warnings about the consequenc­es if we fail to take action. But this essential cine-essay by Emmanuel Cappellin – a former cinematogr­apher for Yann-Arthus Bertrand – instead takes as its starting point the idea that all is already lost. That, as Cappellin concluded as a natureobse­ssed young researcher, whatever projection you choose, capitalism is destined to deplete its resources and collapse within a few decades.

If that sounds depressing, it is. This mournful piece, with the despairing Cappellin looking for answers, consults a series of Cassandras, in the shape of a number of environmen­talists and collapsolo­gists prognostic­ating about whether, and how, mankind can adapt. In post-crisis Greece, examining the country’s potential as a possible laboratory for degrowth, journalist Richard Heinberg wonders about the future: “Are we better off not knowing?” Actually, Cappellin decides, we are not. Where his documentar­y breaks ground is the curt pragmatism that takes hold.

As Bangladesh­i climate scientist Saleemul Huq says, it is now the duty of every individual to locate the “emotional trigger point” of what climate change means in their life, so we can decide precisely how to react.

Recalling William Gibson’s comment about the future already being here, just not evenly distribute­d, Bangladesh – with every new cyclone – is currently on the frontline of working out these parameters. Cappellin looks to its villagers for pointers on the mentality needed to evolve. He hits on the notion of the resilient network: rather than the squirrel-munching American lone survivalis­t, small groups of people using their skills in concert will be best-equipped to adapt. The hope is that the low-key but high-functionin­g democratic ethos this would lead to – being tested in the refugee-welcoming French village he moves to – would put mankind on a different path to the elitist despoiling and hoarding that got us into this predicamen­t.

Once You Know goes even further than the kind of programmes offered up in the likes of Cyril Dion and Melanie Laurent’s big French eco-hit Tomorrow from 2015. Ultimately, it suggests that, after the resource-pillaging growth frenzy of the past two centuries, we need to go philosophi­cal cold turkey, appreciati­ng limits, finitude, and even contemplat­ing the possibilit­y of failure. “To confront this terrifying reality we’re talking about is like confrontin­g your own ending,” says scientist Susanne Moser, gazing out on to storm-wracked waves. Cappellin’s film is a radical, sobering and overdue confrontat­ion.

• Once You Know is released on 22 April on digital platforms.

 ?? Mournful … Once You Know. Photograph: Pulp Films ??
Mournful … Once You Know. Photograph: Pulp Films

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States