AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH

Al Gore's film leaves another inconvient truth in its wake: was this film worth making in the light of its own not insubstantial carbon imprint? I think the answer is yes, but only just. The film is at least an attempt to put across all the issues in an accessible, quite amusing and entertaining way. Gore's own religious (some would say lunatic) views shine through, although he hardly has to constantly justify them. But he is always addressing a certain audience of would-be moralists in the US who really don't think that anyone in America should move an inch to do anything about the issues that Gore depicts. Gore doesn't mention it directly, but this film is really about American exceptionalism, why it feels it can remain outside the international consensus, outside the Kyoto agreement on global warming.

This film is at least a relevant, timely contribution to the debate on climate, fossil fuels and all the rest of the environmental issues that have been revolving on our TV sets and newspapers for the last ten years and more, but it strikes this reviewer as rather belated.

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