Al Gore bringing 'An Inconvenient Sequel' to Toronto

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Al Gore bringing 'An Inconvenient Sequel' to Toronto

By Mark Daniell, Postmedia Network
First posted: Thursday, July 13, 2017 05:22 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, July 13, 2017 05:26 PM EDT
Former vice president Al Gore is headed to Hogtown.


The dedicated environmentalist will attend a special screening of An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power — the follow-up to his 2006 Oscar-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth — on Friday, July 21 at 7 p.m. at the Scotiabank Theatre.


The film follows Gore as he travels the world to show us how close humanity is getting to a real energy revolution.


The event will include an in-person Q&A with Gore, producer Jeff Skoll, Founder and Chairman of Participant Media and Canada's Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna.


Tickets are available at cineplex.com.
Al Gore speaks during a Q&A following a special screening of "An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power" at ACMI on July 13, 2017 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures)



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Al Gore talks 'An Inconvenient Sequel'
By Liz Braun, Postmedia Network
First posted: Sunday, July 30, 2017 07:00 AM EDT
It seems incredible now, but when An Inconvenient Truth came out in 2006 with its message about global warming, it caused an uproar.
The film — hailed by scientists and condemned by special interest groups — followed former vice-president Al Gore on his personal campaign to raise public awareness of climate issues.
Gore took a lot of heat for his efforts.
Nonetheless, the movie was a huge critical and popular success. It’s the first documentary ever to win two Oscars; it won Gore and the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for their work in educating the public about global warming.
Now Gore, 69, has released An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power, a film about what progress has been made in staging a global energy revolution.
It opens Friday, Aug. 4.
As the movie shows, the fallout from global warming has only got worse, what with disintegrating polar ice and increased extreme weather incidents — not to mention the consequent drought, crop failure and social upheaval.
Back in 2006, one of the most controversial sequences in An Inconvenient Truth was the prediction that rising tides would eventually leave parts of Manhattan under water, including the 9/11 Memorial Site; early in An Inconvenient Sequel there is footage of the site in 2012, being flooded during Hurricane Sandy.
An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power walks a fine line between hope and despair. The camera follows Gore around the planet as he continues to look at evidence of global warming but also reports on the amazing progress being made as world leaders unite to make positive change in energy consumption.
We spoke to Al Gore when he visited Toronto to promote the movie.
Given that leaving politics led to your work on global warming, should we be glad that the presidential election in 2000 went the way it did?
“Once, when Winston Churchill was a young man and he lost an election, a friend said, ‘Winston, this is a blessing in disguise.’ And he said, ‘Damn good disguise.’ [Laughs]. I’m under no illusion that there’s any position with as much ability to bring good change in the world as that of president. But I’m very grateful to have had the opportunity to have served the public interest.”
Why, with all the evidence in front of us, would anyone still be a climate change denier?
“The large carbon polluters have a lot at stake, and they took the playbook from the tobacco companies, who years ago responded to the medical and scientific consensus linking cigarettes with lung cancer and other diseases. They hired actors and dressed them up as doctors and put them in front of cameras to falsely reassure people there was no health problem at all — and 100 million people died. These carbon polluters have hired the very same PR firms and they’re using the same techniques. And that’s why a lot of the climate denial has persisted.”
Your father was a profound influence on your life and career. Who else inspired you to do this sort of work?
“Well, my father and my mother. And I was fortunate, back in the 1960s, to have a college professor who was one of the great scientists in the climate field. He was the first person to measure CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere. And he opened my eyes to this crisis a long time ago. Everything that’s happened since has been consistent with what he predicted. So I would point to the teachers I’ve had.”
That professor was climate change pioneer Roger Revelle?
“I went to the 100th anniversary of his birth at the Scripps Institute. He was deceased by then. His widow was there. I read up even more on him beforehand, and learned that when he was in college, way back early in the last century, he had a professor who opened his eyes and really inspired him. And I thought, ‘Wow, there are all these chains of inspiration and teaching that go back centuries and millennia.’”
Do you have an opinion on where film fits into contemporary life?
“In the noise of the current communications environment, people are distracted and pulled this way and that. And this has created an opportunity for documentary movies to become the queen of media, where it’s the only chance where people sit down in a communal environment and listen, for 90 to 100 minutes, and really get a thoughtful expression of carefully crafted thoughts and images.”
Where does your sense of hope come from? Your energy for this work?
“Well, first, it’s a privilege to have work to do that gives you the feeling that it justifies every ounce of energy you can pour into it. If you’re doing what it feels like you’re supposed to be doing, then that gives you more energy back. You remember the movie Chariots of Fire? One of the runners spoke a line that stayed with me, he said, ‘When I run, I feel God’s pleasure.’ When you’re doing work that feels really valuable, and the best way to spend your time, it gives you a sense of real joy.”
So you’re not keeping a s— list of enemies?
“Um. Somebody once said, ‘Hatred is the poison we give ourselves while we wait for our enemies to die.’ [Laughs] I don’t have much time for that. And if I’m tempted to it, I remember what Winston Churchill once said about the American people: they generally do the right thing, after first exhausting all available alternatives. [Laughs]
You’ve lead a life of public service. What would you consider your legacy?
“I hope I’ll be remembered for something I haven’t completed yet — and that’s solving the climate crisis. Many others are engaged in the same struggle and I hope, 10 years from now, we’ll look back on the decade ahead of us now and say, ‘We really crossed the tipping point. People really awakened to the danger and seized the opportunities to solve it and made life better for everybody.’”
NOTE TO TEACHERS There is a book called An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power that will be released the same day as the movie, August 4.
Everyone can log onto inconvenientsequel.com to discover ways to take action against global warming; teachers will find an ‘Educational Resources’ tab on the website.
Twitter: @LizBraunSun
LBraun@postmedia.com
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THAT ELECTION
He wuz robbed.
On November 7, 2000, Vice-President Al Gore won the popular vote in the U.S. and should have become the country’s 43rd President.
Instead, following recounts in Florida that were eventually halted by the Supreme Court, the election was handed to George W. Bush.
Bad day for Al Gore. Great day for the planet.
The results of that election led Gore directly to his current position as a crusader to fight global warming. Most of his time is occupied with The Climate Reality Project; he’s chairman of the non-profit, which is devoted to solving the climate crisis. He did find the time to write five bestselling books: Earth in the Balance; An Inconvenient Truth; The Assault on Reason; Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis, and The Future: Six Drivers of Global Change.
Politics’ loss is our gain.
There have been five elections in America in which the winner of the popular vote did not become president; in four of those cases, the contested election went to the Republican candidate, and in the fifth case, the resultant bitterness led directly to the creation of the Democratic Party. Extrapolate at will.
-Liz Braun
TRUMP AND TRUDEAU
An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power handles the Donald Trump problem with finesse. Neither Gore nor anyone else says anything much that’s negative — the film simply lets Trump speak for himself. It’s not a pretty picture.
Gore, like many others, is disappointed by President Trump’s withdrawal of the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accord but heartened to see the response from individual states of the union to continue to fight global warming regardless.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the spectrum, there’s a snippet in the movie with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who is modest and enthusiastic when he stops to introduce himself to Gore and offer words of encouragement.
Says Gore of the Trudeau moment, “We did a pre-screening in Washington, D.C., and when that scene came up, all the congressmen and senators in the audience started applauding.”
Makes us proud to be Canadian.
-Liz Braun
(Handout)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=huX1bmfdkyA
An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth To Power: In Theaters Friday | Paramount Pictures
http://inconvenientsequel.com
Al Gore talks 'An Inconvenient Sequel' | Movies | Entertainment | Toronto Sun
 

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Al Gore's hypocrisy 'breathtaking'
By Lorrie Goldstein, Toronto Sun
First posted: Saturday, July 29, 2017 06:08 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday, July 29, 2017 06:14 PM EDT
Global warming guru Al Gore blew through Toronto recently on a promotional tour for An Inconvenient Sequel, the follow up to his 2006 Academy Award winning film, An Inconvenient Truth.
The sequel is scheduled for general release in August, and Gore had high praise for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — who briefly appears with Gore in the new film — as a key player in negotiating the 2015 Paris climate treaty.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner also took a mild shot at Trudeau, expressing disappointment he supports oil and gas pipelines.
Never mind that the purpose of those pipelines is to transport Canada’s oil and natural gas resources to market, fossil fuels which supply the energy Gore relies on to keep his never-ending global, jet-setting environmental crusade airborne.
This as he travels the world in the lap of luxury urging the rest of us to tighten our belts to save the planet.
Fact is, the world really would be in imminent, existential danger from global warming if everyone consumed as much fossil fuel energy as Gore does.
The failed U.S. presidential candidate completely jumped the shark in 2013 when he sold his struggling liberal cable network, Current TV, to Al Jazeera for $500 million, with a reported payday of up to $100 million for himself.
Al Jazeera is owned by the oil and gas emirate of Qatar, an Arab dictatorship currently denying allegations from surrounding Arab dictatorships that it funds Islamic terrorism.
Gore’s hypocrisy in selling Current TV to Mideast oil and gas interests, given his crusade against fossil fuels, can only be described as breathtaking.
Ontario residents should think of Gore every time they pay their electricity bills, which doubled over the past decade to become the highest in Canada, taking the shine off Premier Kathleen Wynne’s promise to cut them by “25%” starting this summer.
(Actually, 17%. The Liberals cut electricity rates by 8% on Jan. 1, 2017, a year after raising them 10% when they cancelled a subsidy program.)
Back in the heady days of November, 2009, Gore flew into Toronto to praise then Liberal premier Dalton McGuinty’s passage of Ontario’s Green Energy Act that year, before a sold-out audience of 1,300 at the Allstream Centre in Exhibition Place.
Two Ontario auditors general — first Jim McCarter and now Bonnie Lysyk — have since extensively reported on how the Green Energy Act has been a financial disaster for Ontarians.
They documented how the McGuinty government, followed by Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government, wasted billions of public dollars buying expensive and unreliable wind and solar power they didn’t need to replace coal-fired electricity, which was done with nuclear power and natural gas.
The auditors found the Liberals failed to develop proper business plans, economic impact studies, or even do internal auditing, laying the groundwork for every Liberal energy blunder from the cancelled gas plants scandal to the smart meters fiasco.
Undeterred, Gore was back in Toronto four years later in November, 2013, praising Wynne at the province’s MaRS building for announcing Ontario would ban the use of coal-fired electricity in the province forever, thanking her on behalf of the “world” for “doing a fantastic job.”
Now, Ontario is about to re-enter the coal-fired electricity business in Colstrip, Montana, after Wynne sold control of Hydro One to private investors.
Funny how things work out, eh?
lgoldstein@postmedia.com
Al Gore poses for a photograph before talking about his new film "An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth the Power" in Toronto on Friday, July 21, 2017. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette)

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‘An Inconvenient Sequel’ review: Al Gore continues to hammer at global warming, but with a sense of resignation, not urgency
Michael O'Sullivan, The Washington Post
First posted: Thursday, August 03, 2017 10:47 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, August 03, 2017 10:54 AM EDT
In a time when climate change seems an issue more vital than ever it is odd to find oneself in the position of saying this: The new documentary about Al Gore's continued climate crusade lacks urgency.
It's not the fault of the former vice president, who continues - with fervor - his campaign to school people about global warming, but a weakness of the film, "An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power." A follow-up to Davis Guggenheim's Oscar-winning 2006 documentary, the sequel by Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk covers much of the same ground of the first film, but with a tone that feels, at times, midway between a sense of resignation and despair. Those emotions might not be entirely foreign to Gore himself, who speaks, in the film, of his frustration and his struggle to remain hopeful in the face of political inertia (or outright backpedaling).
As in the first film, Cohen and Shenk follow Gore as he takes his climate-education road show around the world, interspersing clips of his public talks about climate science with more private moments in which he speaks of his emotions. More depressing even than the images of ecological disaster that the film traffics in - including scenes of floods in Miami and glacier loss in Greenland - is Gore's dismal, but probably accurate, assessment of what needs to be done before we can save the planet:
"In order to address the climate crisis," he says, "we're going to have to fix the democracy crisis."
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Two and one-half stars. Rated PG. Contains mature thematic material and some troubling images. 98 minutes.
Al Gore gives his updated presentation in Houston in "An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth To Powe." MUST CREDIT: Jensen Walker, Paramount Pictures
An Inconvenient Sequel
3.0 stars
Directed by: Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk
Duration: 98 minutes

‘An Inconvenient Sequel’ review: Al Gore continues to hammer at global warming,
 

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Gore book’s inconvenient sales data
Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, September 05, 2017 03:36 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 05, 2017 03:49 PM EDT
Al Gore’s latest treatise on global warming is being outsold on Amazon Kindle — by a book debunking the former U.S. Vice President’s climate theories.
According to the Daily Caller, An Inconvenient Sequel is getting smoked by climatologist Roy Spencer’s An Inconvenient Deception.
Spencer said he wrote his tome to expose the “bad science, bad policy and some outright falsehoods” in Gore’s movie and book extravaganza.
Gore’s latest efforts were released in August.
“There are three big weaknesses in Gore’s new movie: science, economics and energy policy,” climate skeptic Spencer told the Caller.
Policy wonk Gore rose to rock star status following the release of his 2006 documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.
The e-book accompanying the film is ranked 51,031 on the list of purchases from the Kindle Store, according to Amazon.
Spencer’s book ranked 1,201 for Kindle Store purchases.
Gore has pointed to recent environmental calamities to prove his point.
But not so fast, says climate skeptic Spencer.
“It’s wrong because everything Gore shows in the new movie happens naturally,” said Spencer, who’s been studying the climate for decades.
Gore book
 

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Third rock from the Sun
Gore book’s inconvenient sales data
Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, September 05, 2017 03:36 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 05, 2017 03:49 PM EDT
Al Gore’s latest treatise on global warming is being outsold on Amazon Kindle — by a book debunking the former U.S. Vice President’s climate theories.
According to the Daily Caller, An Inconvenient Sequel is getting smoked by climatologist Roy Spencer’s An Inconvenient Deception.
Spencer said he wrote his tome to expose the “bad science, bad policy and some outright falsehoods” in Gore’s movie and book extravaganza.
Gore’s latest efforts were released in August.
“There are three big weaknesses in Gore’s new movie: science, economics and energy policy,” climate skeptic Spencer told the Caller.
Policy wonk Gore rose to rock star status following the release of his 2006 documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.
The e-book accompanying the film is ranked 51,031 on the list of purchases from the Kindle Store, according to Amazon.
Spencer’s book ranked 1,201 for Kindle Store purchases.
Gore has pointed to recent environmental calamities to prove his point.
But not so fast, says climate skeptic Spencer.
“It’s wrong because everything Gore shows in the new movie happens naturally,” said Spencer, who’s been studying the climate for decades.
Gore book

Sold just as much as the Al Gore Doll

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