USA TODAY US Edition

Gore’s sequel is right on time for the Trump era

Former VP is back with another take on climate change

- Patrick Ryan

CITY, The 33rd PARK UTAH annual Sundance Film Festival got off to an appropriat­ely political start.

Hours after founder Robert Redford defended artists in the Donald Trump era at an openingday news conference, former vice president Al Gore acknowledg­ed the president in his topical An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to

Power, which premiered at the fest Thursday.

Directed by Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk, Sequel (which Paramount will release in theaters July 28) surveys the alarming effects of climate change in the decade since Gore’s Academy Award-winning 2006 documentar­y, An Inconvenie­nt Truth.

The 99-minute film is centered on Gore as he travels around the country giving presentati­ons in his “climate leadership training ” sessions: spouting off troubling statistics of air pollution levels and polar ice caps melting but also more encouragin­g, upward trends in solar and renewable energy worldwide.

Audience members wiped away tears during emotional interviews with survivors of the Philippine­s’ Typhoon Haiyan in 2013 and later when Gore traveled to Paris for a global conference on climate change just weeks after terrorist attacks rocked the city in November 2015.

But scenes involving Trump elicited the most passionate responses from the crowd — some of whom shook their heads and muttered profanitie­s during TV clips of Trump calling globalwarm­ing fears “insane” and a “low problem” on the nation’s agenda. The film ends with Gore reading news of Trump’s victory the day after the election: at first seemingly frustrated but later hopeful as he walks into a meeting at Trump Tower in New York.

Despite worries that Trump will seek to cut climate and energy funding, Gore stuck to his encouragin­g message as he addressed festival-goers at the Eccles Theatre.

“Over the years, there have been a lot of people who have started out as deniers and have changed over time. Whether he will or not remains to be seen,” Gore said. He said global warming is “not a political issue; it’s a moral issue, it’s an ethical issue. ... We have the capacity to rise above our limitation­s. Whether or not Donald Trump will take the kind of approach that continues this progress, we’ll have to see. But let me reiterate: No one person can stop this. It’s too big now.” Reviews have been positive for

Sequel, whose premiere the night before Trump’s inaugurati­on many critics found apt and even beneficial.

“If Hillary Clinton were about to be inaugurate­d as president, then An Inconvenie­nt Sequel would still be highly worth seeing,” wrote Variety’s Owen Gleiberman. “But the movie ... has now been given the kind of shot in the arm that only a seething enemy can provide.”

Indiewire’s Eric Kohn said Gore “hits an inspiring note at a moment when it’s in short supply,” even if another sequel may be needed sooner rather than later.

 ?? SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? Al Gore follows up his Oscar-winning 2006 documentar­y with An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power, out this summer.
SUNDANCE INSTITUTE Al Gore follows up his Oscar-winning 2006 documentar­y with An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power, out this summer.

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