Los Angeles Times

On a mission to make world better

- — Robert Abele

Spirited dancing opens and ends “Gasland” maker Josh Fox’s documentar­y “How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can’t Change,” but in between is a lot of info more likely to chill your bones than wiggle your rump.

Widening his purview beyond the hazards of fracking, Fox examines the global effects of a warming planet by traveling to affected areas (post-Sandy Brooklyn, pollution-wracked Beijing, the oil-scarred Amazon), meeting activists and innovators whose mission to make things better is intended to wake us up from our what-can-be-done malaise.

It’s all well and good as a progressiv­e-minded travelogue, since the people Fox finds are inspiring in the face of impending jeopardy. But his need to insert himself into every element of his fact dump — crying to the camera at one point, playing the banjo, cutting from interviewe­es so he can continue narrating — is too often grating, as if the environmen­tal crisis needed him as a filter before the message could be made gospel. (He doesn’t even get going on his around-theworld adventure until half an hour of gloomy handwringi­ng has passed.)

Even with the over-personaliz­ed approach, though, the film says all the right things about an unnerving peril and the various ways some highly motivated people are trying to combat it.

“How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can’t Change.” Running time: 2 hours, 7 minutes. Not rated. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Laemmle Ahrya Fine Arts; also on HBO starting June 27.

 ?? HBO Documentar­y Films ?? PACIFIC Climate Warriors celebrate stopping a coal ship from leaving Australia in “How to Let Go .... ”
HBO Documentar­y Films PACIFIC Climate Warriors celebrate stopping a coal ship from leaving Australia in “How to Let Go .... ”

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