HELPFUL
HINTS FOR SAVING THE PLANET
By MANOHLA DARGIS
The New York Times, 8/17/07

Yeah,
yeah, yeah, the environment, blah, blah, blah, melting ice caps.
To judge from all the gas-guzzlers still fouling the air and the
plastic bottles clogging the dumps, it appears that the news that
we are killing ourselves and the world with our greed and garbage
hasn’t sunk in.
That’s one reason “The 11th Hour,” an unnerving,
surprisingly affecting documentary about our environmental calamity,
is such essential viewing. It may not change your life, but it may
inspire you to recycle that old slogan-button your folks pinned
on their dashikis back in the day: If you’re not part of the
solution, you’re part of the problem.
The problem looks overwhelming, literally, as demonstrated by the
images of overflowing landfills and sickeningly polluted bodies
of water that flicker through the movie like damning evidence. Structured
in mainstream fiction-film fashion (in other words, like a term
paper), it opens with an introduction that presents the case, builds
momentum with an absorbing analytical middle section and wraps up
with just enough optimism that I didn’t want to run home and
stick my head in an energy-efficient oven. No matter how well intentioned,
political documentaries that present problems without real-life,
real-time, real-people solutions — an 800 number, an address,
something — just add to the noise (pollution), becoming another
title on some filmmaker’s résumé as well as
a temporary salve for the audience’s guilt.
Written and directed by the sisters Leila
Conners Petersen and Nadia Conners, and narrated on-and off-camera
by Leonardo DiCaprio, who served as one of the producers, “The
11th Hour” attempts to stave off helplessness, and the nihilism
that often follows it, mostly by appealing to our reason.
In one interview snippet after another, dozens
of scientists, activists, gurus, policy types and even a magical-mushroom
guy go through the arguments, present the data and criticize the
anti-green faction, putting words to the images that are liberally
interspersed between these talking heads like mortar. Every so often,
Mr. DiCaprio pops up on screen to interrupt this show and tell,
squinting into the camera and pushing the narrative to the next
topic.
If your head isn’t lodged in the sand,
much of what’s said in the movie will be agonizing and familiar.
Gasping children, disappearing animals, gushing oil, billowing smoke,
dying lakes, emptying forests, warming weather—the list of
ills is numbingly familiar. In the movie’s eye-catching opener,
the directors riffle through a veritable catalog of timely snapshots,
some obvious (a smoggy skyline), others less so (a human fetus).
Effectively blunt, this sequence provoked
a colleague to invoke the name of the avant-garde giant Stan Brakhage,
but the truer visual and structural model here is a film like “Koyaanisqatsi,”
with its streaming global landscapes. The difference is that the
images in “The 11th Hour” are pointedly horrifying,
not reassuring, pacific or aestheticized.
That can make it tough to watch, which the directors clearly know.
They whip through the pictures and the interviews fast — at
times a little too fast — and keep the information flowing
as quickly as the visuals. This swift, steady pace means that you
receive a lot of bad news from a lot of different sources. The ecologist
Brock Dolman explains, “When we started feeding off the fossil
fuel cycle, we began living with a death-based cycle.” From
there the topic nimbly jumps to climate change, national security
(courtesy the former director of the C.I.A., R. James Woolsey),
Katrina, asthma and the stunning news from the oceanographer and
author Sylvia Earle that “we’ve lost 90 percent of most
of the big fish in the sea.”
Yes, it’s bad, but it’s not over yet. Many of those
same sober talking heads also argue with equal passion that we can
save ourselves, along with the sky above us and the earth below.
The capacity for human beings to fight, to rise to the occasion,
as Mr. Woolsey notes, invoking America’s rapid, albeit delayed
jump into World War II, gives hope where none might seem possible.
It is our astonishing capacity for hope that distinguishes “The
11th Hour” and that speaks so powerfully, in part because
it is this all-too-human quality that may finally force us to fight
the good fight against the damage we have done and continue to do.
As the saying goes, keep hope alive — and if you’re
holding this review in your hands, don’t forget to recycle
the paper.
LEONARDO DiCAPRIO
DESERVES PRAISE FOR HIS SUCCESSFUL ENTRY INTO THE LEGION OF PRODUCERS,
BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN YOU SHOULD DISMISS HIM AS AN ACTOR. FOR A
RUNDOWN ON HIS UPCOMING ROLE-PLAYING, CLICK
HERE AND BROWSE THE "D" PAGE OF STAR TURNS.
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