VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,9/10
3683
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Il clima sta cambiando. Invece di mostrare il peggio che può succedere, questo documentario si focalizza sulle persone che suggeriscono soluzioni e sulle loro azioni.Il clima sta cambiando. Invece di mostrare il peggio che può succedere, questo documentario si focalizza sulle persone che suggeriscono soluzioni e sulle loro azioni.Il clima sta cambiando. Invece di mostrare il peggio che può succedere, questo documentario si focalizza sulle persone che suggeriscono soluzioni e sulle loro azioni.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
Bernard A. Lietaer
- Self
- (as Bernard Lietaer)
Recensioni in evidenza
Optimistic film about the sad end of our world. The authors fantasize about how the planet can escape from the globalization that destroys it. Film gives the examples of autonomous communities, local economies, implemented or revived ideas that can be effective mechanisms for rescue from the sixth wave of extinction. Which, by the way, the authors categorically attribute to human activities. Researchers' arguments are based on the examples which are not some freak phenomenons, but a very real experience of successful farms, businesses, cities and even countries.
From the artistic point of view the film also has a fair value. Temporytm is provided by the interesting plans, offscreen dialogues, unobtrusive infographics and a wonderful soundtrack. Non accidental and very stylish music - is the most successful technical solution that adorns the story.
The film is generally bright, shot in light colors, and the characters turn to the audience with a lively optimism, though they are saying that in 100 years we can disappear as a species if we will not start to make at least some effort for our own salvation.
This film brought the second Cesar to the star of 'Inglourious Basterds' Mélanie Laurent. Only the first she has received as an actress for the movie "Do not worry, I'm fine" in 2007, and now she has won as a director in the category Best Documentary Film.
Clearly, the picture is noteworthy. Especially it will be interesting to those who are concerned about environmental issues, globalization, urbanization, etc. It is unlikely that it will move the boulder of all- consuming capitalism, reach out the hearts of politicians and businessmen. But many things are going to clarify.
From the artistic point of view the film also has a fair value. Temporytm is provided by the interesting plans, offscreen dialogues, unobtrusive infographics and a wonderful soundtrack. Non accidental and very stylish music - is the most successful technical solution that adorns the story.
The film is generally bright, shot in light colors, and the characters turn to the audience with a lively optimism, though they are saying that in 100 years we can disappear as a species if we will not start to make at least some effort for our own salvation.
This film brought the second Cesar to the star of 'Inglourious Basterds' Mélanie Laurent. Only the first she has received as an actress for the movie "Do not worry, I'm fine" in 2007, and now she has won as a director in the category Best Documentary Film.
Clearly, the picture is noteworthy. Especially it will be interesting to those who are concerned about environmental issues, globalization, urbanization, etc. It is unlikely that it will move the boulder of all- consuming capitalism, reach out the hearts of politicians and businessmen. But many things are going to clarify.
Divided into five chapters - agriculture, energy, economy, democracy, and education - this inspiring documentary gives us hope with non-Utopian, concrete local and global solutions to build a better world for tomorrow: Permaculture and local, organic agriculture, local currencies, circular economy, new modes of active democracy, a more social and human education... For once, I did not leave the cinema with a heavy feeling of impotency and doom after watching a documentary about climate change. The reason is that the film doesn't dwell on the problems that we face but rather on the solutions that we already have and that work.
The protagonists are both humble and great. Some are already famous (ex. Pierre Rabhi, Vandana Shiva)but they don't stand as heroes... they are just guides showing us new and innovative paths.
The soundtrack and the picture quality are bonuses.
Because we must and because we can :)
The protagonists are both humble and great. Some are already famous (ex. Pierre Rabhi, Vandana Shiva)but they don't stand as heroes... they are just guides showing us new and innovative paths.
The soundtrack and the picture quality are bonuses.
Because we must and because we can :)
This documentary is made to show that, in our complex world, there are still things everyone can do.
In that this is a success and it gives a good overview of the initiatives that are possible and that can give enough hope to people to do something.
And it starts in stating the situation as I rarely saw it, which is highly praiseworthy.
Of course, it simplifies a lot, sometimes with solutions/alternatives contradicting each other, sometimes not fully convincing. Some of the (not really) innocent questions can be a bit heavy. I would also criticize the quality of the soundtrack and some images that in my opinion avoid some concluding sentences to resonate as much as it could have.
However, from its clear statement to good examples, it shows that overcomplexifying is generally a dead end and a nice justification not to act. Acting local has results. Trying is worth, already by the change of consciousness it brings. Local solutions won't clear everything but we can hope than from local personal initiative, to cities, it will go global at one point. Stating bad news as bad is necessary as the current situation still fails to be recognized for what it is. But that is not enough and people can just think that this is too much, that nothing can be done. However a small step is still a step and this documentary reminds that hope is necessary too.
Of course, it simplifies a lot, sometimes with solutions/alternatives contradicting each other, sometimes not fully convincing. Some of the (not really) innocent questions can be a bit heavy. I would also criticize the quality of the soundtrack and some images that in my opinion avoid some concluding sentences to resonate as much as it could have.
However, from its clear statement to good examples, it shows that overcomplexifying is generally a dead end and a nice justification not to act. Acting local has results. Trying is worth, already by the change of consciousness it brings. Local solutions won't clear everything but we can hope than from local personal initiative, to cities, it will go global at one point. Stating bad news as bad is necessary as the current situation still fails to be recognized for what it is. But that is not enough and people can just think that this is too much, that nothing can be done. However a small step is still a step and this documentary reminds that hope is necessary too.
I rarely have the time to write reviews lately even though i would love to.
Avid movie goer and supporter of zero carbon economies, I felt i wasted my time watching Demain, so warning others motivated me to write this one.
The first three chapters (agriculture, energy, economy) are bearable because they are in the right direction, including some good interviews such as with Jeremy Rifkin, yet they are broadly banal because they mostly project well known, and often old, stories as something revelatory, new and the future.
The European Union has doubled from 8% to 16% in the last ten years the contribution of renewables to the energy mix, with many countries already by 2014 having achieved the 20% target which is supposed to be achieved by 2020. Did we really need pictures of wind farms in Denmark to find out that there is an alternative future?
In the first three chapters, my impression was the creators of the movie felt they had just discovered "America".
The last two chapters (democracy and education) were worse, trying to talk about hugely complex issues with amateuristic banality and simplifications, e.g the interviewer asks a teacher in Finland about what the projected as ground breaking new teaching techniques are to hear as a response that their objective is to promote tolerance.
Finally, i found the way the film was presented as a bit manipulative with all the pictures about the alternative futures being framed in idealistic settings, shot in sunny days, beautiful sunsets, or sitting by the sea on a warm summer day.
I guess in the real world it does rain too sometimes, and to be credible and avoid descending into propaganda one has also to address the challenges too. I feel a good documentary should encourage debate and present different views. Nothing of this here.
I agree with the direction of the movie: urban farming, low or zero carbon economies, local community economies to balance the excesses of global capitalism, my views too. In short, promoting more resilient societies in an increasingly globalised world.
My disappointment comes from my belief that misguided efforts to popularise alternative futures and misplaced enthusiasm could do more harm than good, creating cheap expectations that everything is possible and fast, generating simplistic readings of a complex world, and offering cheap optimism where they should encourage personal responsibility. As Jan Techau wrote recently: If you rely on the rage of the people more than on the merits of your own idea, then your case is weak.
Alternative futures to be sustainable require dialogue between competing social interests not competing activisms each glorifying its own alternative.
Avid movie goer and supporter of zero carbon economies, I felt i wasted my time watching Demain, so warning others motivated me to write this one.
The first three chapters (agriculture, energy, economy) are bearable because they are in the right direction, including some good interviews such as with Jeremy Rifkin, yet they are broadly banal because they mostly project well known, and often old, stories as something revelatory, new and the future.
The European Union has doubled from 8% to 16% in the last ten years the contribution of renewables to the energy mix, with many countries already by 2014 having achieved the 20% target which is supposed to be achieved by 2020. Did we really need pictures of wind farms in Denmark to find out that there is an alternative future?
In the first three chapters, my impression was the creators of the movie felt they had just discovered "America".
The last two chapters (democracy and education) were worse, trying to talk about hugely complex issues with amateuristic banality and simplifications, e.g the interviewer asks a teacher in Finland about what the projected as ground breaking new teaching techniques are to hear as a response that their objective is to promote tolerance.
Finally, i found the way the film was presented as a bit manipulative with all the pictures about the alternative futures being framed in idealistic settings, shot in sunny days, beautiful sunsets, or sitting by the sea on a warm summer day.
I guess in the real world it does rain too sometimes, and to be credible and avoid descending into propaganda one has also to address the challenges too. I feel a good documentary should encourage debate and present different views. Nothing of this here.
I agree with the direction of the movie: urban farming, low or zero carbon economies, local community economies to balance the excesses of global capitalism, my views too. In short, promoting more resilient societies in an increasingly globalised world.
My disappointment comes from my belief that misguided efforts to popularise alternative futures and misplaced enthusiasm could do more harm than good, creating cheap expectations that everything is possible and fast, generating simplistic readings of a complex world, and offering cheap optimism where they should encourage personal responsibility. As Jan Techau wrote recently: If you rely on the rage of the people more than on the merits of your own idea, then your case is weak.
Alternative futures to be sustainable require dialogue between competing social interests not competing activisms each glorifying its own alternative.
The world needs more films like this one: inspirational, educational, meaningful and mindful. Excellent work!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn France this documentary had 718,000 viewers in 12 weeks.
- Citazioni
Jeremy Rifkin: In Germany, the vast majority of the electricity being generated is by small players in electricity cooperatives, which are democratic managed institutions.
[sic]
- ConnessioniReferenced in Demain Genève (2018)
- Colonne sonoreStep By Step
Written by Fredrika Stahl
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 62.510 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1480 USD
- 12 mar 2017
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 11.291.395 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 58min(118 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.4 : 1
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