Bangkok Post

An inconvenie­nt truth

In Apple TV’s Extrapolat­ions, climate change is presented in an entertaini­ng format

- CHRIS VOGNAR YORK TIMES COMPANY

YI don’t believe I’m going to move people or change their attitude about anything unless first I entertain them

ears ago, when Scott Z. Burns was doing some uncredited script work on Steven Soderbergh’s escapist heist movie Ocean’s Twelve (2004), Burns made the mistake of cracking a joke about the popcorn movie they were making. Soderbergh quickly set him straight.

Movies and TV shows are a transactio­n, Soderbergh told him. Filmmakers and showrunner­s tell viewers a story, and viewers give that story their time.

“He told me that is a transactio­n that we, as storytelle­rs, can’t afford to be cynical about,” Burns said in a recent video call. In other words, entertainm­ent is the storytelle­r’s mandate.

The lesson came in handy as Burns was writing, producing and directing multiple episodes of Extrapolat­ions, the new limited series he created for Apple TV+. The series, which features a large, illustriou­s cast — top names include Edward Norton and Meryl Streep — conjures eight hours of drama, science fiction and some occasional comedy on the subject of global warming. As subjects go, it’s a tough sell; the series could easily have come across like an urgent plea to eat your vegetables.

But not if he could make it at least a little bit fun.

“I don’t believe I’m going to move people or change their attitude about anything unless first I entertain them,” said Burns, best known for writing the research-heavy Soderbergh movies Contagion, Side Effects and The Informant! (and for writing and directing the 2019 political thriller The Report). “That, to me, is the fun part of the job: creating entertainm­ent that maybe sticks with somebody.”

Make no mistake: It was a challenge. Telling multiple, sometimes interlocki­ng stories that cover the years 2037 to 2070, Extrapolat­ions is hugely ambitious, exploring climate change from religious, political, economic, technologi­cal and social perspectiv­es. Each episode (with the exception of one two-parter) leaps ahead several years as the climate crisis worsens, traversing the globe from Alaska to India, much of it shot overseas. Fires rage, cities flood and famines spread, but life continues, including all of the myopia, power-grabbing and need for deeper meaning that has always characteri­sed human history.

It’s a series full of big ideas. But that is typical for Burns, said Matthew Rhys, who stars and has been friends with Burns for several years. (Rhys also played a small but important role in The Report.)

“He is forever posing the questions that would never even cross my stratosphe­re,” Rhys said in a video call. “He has this expanse to his thinking and to his questionin­g, and also this enormous humanity and incredible sensitivit­y.”

Born and raised just outside Minneapoli­s, Burns studied English literature at the University of Minnesota and originally wanted to be a journalist. His father worked in advertisin­g, and Burns followed in his footsteps. He soon discovered that he was good at writing television commercial­s, which is how he met actor and director Peter Berg. Berg was interested in directing ads in between his film and television projects. They became friends, and Berg hired Burns to write for the series Wonderland (2000), a drama set in a psychiatri­c facility modelled on Bellevue Hospital.

The series lasted only one season, but the experience taught Burns two things about himself. He had a talent for writing screenplay­s, and he loved doing research. He would spend hours at Bellevue, immersing himself in the atmosphere and the history.

Burns traces his environmen­tal awakening to the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, in which some 41.6 million litres of crude oil were spilled into Prince William Sound, Alaska. Burns took a leave from his advertisin­g job to help clean otters affected by the spill. He soon realised that the otter centre where he worked was part of a carefully planned strategy to rehabilita­te Exxon’s image.

“I think what I took from that was that a story, like a place that had been built to clean otters, wasn’t maybe what it looked like,” Burns said. “That was a big thing for me. I came back, and I changed my relationsh­ip to advertisin­g so I could do more work in the environmen­tal space.”

Years later, he jumped at an opportunit­y to work on Davis Guggenheim’s 2006 documentar­y An Inconvenie­nt Truth, joining as a producer.

The film, which won an Oscar for best documentar­y, turned an Al Gore slideshow into a visually compelling and morally persuasive argument for heeding the dire signs of global warming. Viewed widely as an important moment in raising public awareness of climate change, it even spawned a sequel, 2017’s

An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth To Power, with Burns as an executive producer.

Compared to the Inconvenie­nt Truth films, the flashy, effects-heavy Extrapolat­ions feels like Ocean’s Twelve, with a similarly star-studded cast. It includes Marion Cotillard and Forest Whitaker, who play a married couple living a contentiou­s, futuristic Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? existence; Sienna Miller, who plays a pregnant marine biologist wondering what the future holds for her unborn child; David Schwimmer, who plays a slippery lawyer willing to grease some wheels to preserve the temple where his family worships; and Kit Harington, who plays a powerful tech mogul lording over all he sees, Elon Musk-style.

It makes for a lot of intellectu­al and artistic juggling. To that end, Rhys, who plays a craven casino mogul trying to make a fast buck in Alaska, praised Burns’ ability to “view the world from many different perspectiv­es and approach them all with equal empathy”.

That enormous scope was a specific draw for Daveed Diggs (Hamilton, Blindspott­ing), who plays a rabbi trying to balance faith, social obligation and the reality of rapidly rising Miami sea levels in two early episodes.

“I just thought it was a really big swing, and I like things that are big swings,” he said in a video call. “I wasn’t sure how it was all going to work, but the world-building was so smart to me. It is trying to create something that allows us to discuss the reality of climate change in the same way that we discuss other elements of popular culture.”

Extrapolat­ions also fits neatly into a running Burns theme. The world is a scary place, and humans have devised all manner of ways to screw it up. But they also have the capability to fix it, and this gives him hope.

“People who know me would probably say I tend to be a little darker and drier than a lot of other humans,” he said. “But I know that we have all of the solutions to all of these problems. I also recognise that the amount of change that we have to engage in is massive, and human beings don’t tend to change very rapidly.”

Perhaps his latest endeavour can help push things along — and maybe even provide some entertainm­ent along the way. © 2023

 ?? ?? Director Scott Z. Burns.
Director Scott Z. Burns.

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