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Revolution

  • 2012
  • PG
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
470
YOUR RATING
Revolution (2012)
Filmmaker Rob Stewart advances the theory that though humans depend on the natural world for subsistence, humans are nature's greatest enemy.
Play trailer2:08
1 Video
33 Photos
AdventureDocumentaryFamily

Filmmaker Rob Stewart advances the theory that though humans depend on the natural world for subsistence, humans are nature's greatest enemy.Filmmaker Rob Stewart advances the theory that though humans depend on the natural world for subsistence, humans are nature's greatest enemy.Filmmaker Rob Stewart advances the theory that though humans depend on the natural world for subsistence, humans are nature's greatest enemy.

  • Director
    • Rob Stewart
  • Writer
    • Rob Stewart
  • Stars
    • Nnimmo Bassey
    • Krystyna Bednarska
    • Adrienne Maree Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    470
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rob Stewart
    • Writer
      • Rob Stewart
    • Stars
      • Nnimmo Bassey
      • Krystyna Bednarska
      • Adrienne Maree Brown
    • 15User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:08
    Official Trailer

    Photos33

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    + 28
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    Top cast28

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    Nnimmo Bassey
    Nnimmo Bassey
    • Self - Friends of the Earth
    Krystyna Bednarska
    • Self - UN World Food Programme
    Adrienne Maree Brown
    • Self
    Lester Brown
    Lester Brown
    • Self - Earth Policy Institute
    • (as Lester Brown)
    Tony Clarke
    Tony Clarke
    • Self - Polaris Institute
    Clare Demerse
    • Self - Pembina Institute
    Katharina Fabricius
    • Self
    Felix Finkbeiner
    • Self
    David Hannan
    • Self
    Emily Hunter
    • Self
    Van Jones
    Van Jones
    • Self
    Ronald Jumeau
    • Self
    Martin Khor
    • Self - South Center Geneva
    Peter Knights
    Peter Knights
    • Self
    Melina Laboucan-Massimo
    • Self - Greenpeace
    Bill McKibben
    Bill McKibben
    • Self
    Patrick Moore
    Patrick Moore
    • Self
    Kandi Mossett
    • Self - Indigenous Environmental Network
    • Director
      • Rob Stewart
    • Writer
      • Rob Stewart
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    7.3470
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    Featured reviews

    9julianpjones-91250

    Watchable, inspiring and informative

    Covers a range of issues, joined with an engaging personal narrative and culminating in a message that there is hope but we need to get involved in the movement for good. Great cinematography including beautiful underwater scenes and well produced overall.

    Whilst it has a similar message to 'An Inconvenient Truth' or 'Age of Stupid' it also has something in common with David Attenborough wildlife films before it goes on to cover the Canadian tar sands issue. Then it specifically deals with the need for international cooperation at climate conferences and the need to hold politicians who attend to account, and how young people are so engaged and involved. While we have annual climate conferences this will always be topical.
    6SnoopyStyle

    environmental activism

    Rob Stewart grew up as an animal lover and became a filmmaker. In 2007, he released Sharkwater to tackle the shark finning industry. He is then forced to face a much greater threat to the global environment. It starts with the lost of coral due to ocean acidification and the movie closes with the fight against the tar sands in Canada.

    The first half has some interesting underwater filming and a healthy helping of environmental diatribe. It gets a little unbalanced as it concentrates more on the tar sands and railing against Canada at an environment conference. It's not as pretty as underwater life and it is very much tilting at windmills. I'm not convinced of the effectiveness of these environment conferences. There is a naivety to the world that is rather pathetic. They're going to war against powerful forces and their only weapon seems to be shame.
    10sdekster

    Simply Excellent

    I am a big fan of Rob Stewart's work. He had me at Sharkwater. His latest film shows beautiful footage of some of the world's amazing living things, and then the not so beautiful as well, such as Alberta's oil sands. Stewart is very humble in his approach, acknowledging the importance of holding yourself accountable for environmental impacts, and he definitely does not leave his own impact out of the equation.

    The best feature of this film is that it is highly empowering for youth. As an educator, I highly recommend taking your students to see this film. Our school took every kid from grade five through eight to see it before it even hit theatres. It is potentially in theatres for only a few weeks so go now before it is too late.
    10natalie-galazka

    Worthwhile Productions!!

    An incredible film by an incredible man.

    Gorgeous underwater photography - phytoplankton at night, schools of fish moving in fantastic patterns, lemurs in Madagascar dancing and sunbathing!! The interviews with scientists, conservationists and activists present wholistic views on the issues - which left me feeling educated, optimistic and inspired.

    The film takes you through a visual history of underwater and terrestrial life in order to better see where we are and what needs to happen.

    Essential viewing for all.
    8wklessens-47621

    REVOLUTION - An Education About Climate Change

    An educational and sometimes eye-opening movie event was enjoyed by around 100 attendees last Wednesday at Salem's Southern New Hampshire University. NextGen Climate – NH and Regional Field Director McKenzie St. Germain hosted a full evening that included refreshments, a showing of the independent movie REVOLUTION, an entertaining, interactive talk by New England Aquarium Education Director John Anderson, followed by informal discussions by the audience. The evening's topic centered on the worsening problem of climate change/global warming, and steps we all can take to become more aware of what we, our families and friends can do to mitigate it.

    The ridiculing and goofy bumper sticker days are over, as anyone who has the slightest inkling of what is happening right in front of us already knows. This fact was pointed out in both visually beautiful as well as unnerving ways by REVOLUTION,the 85-minute documentary directed by Rob Stewart that opened the evening. Stewart also directed an earlier doc, SHARKWATER, and it was while he was filming that movie that he received one of those epiphanies that we all get sometimes that there was an even bigger situation occurring than what he was then concentrating on.

    One of the problems with climate change is the fact that until the last couple decades its deleterious effects weren't obvious to most people in their day-to-day lives. Those of us who peruse cutting-edge books, online informational studies, etc. were onto the problem long before warming became routinely accepted. But there are still many people whose only knowledge of this universal concern is the well-known plight of the polar bears up in the Arctic, mainly because this piece of information went viral years ago in TV and print.

    REVOLUTION's excellence rests on the incredible job that Stewart and his team did in shooting hours and hours of the underbelly of the ongoing predicament, including close-up shots of the world's rapidly dying coral reefs, various fish/crustacean species in their natural habitat (many on the endangered list), amusing and poignant views of monkey-like lemurs living, loving and playing together, the director and team swimming underwater intermingling with schools of sharks….all fascinating.

    Stewart's narration complements the visuals perfectly, as instead of the typical professional and analytical tone taken by most scientists in nature documentaries we get to listen to a younger voice (32 years old at time of filming) whose awe and fear of what he was discovering as the cinematic process commenced comes through loud and clear. His friendly and personal style seems to be saying that he's "one of us" despite his superior knowledge about his subject, and we get more of a kinship with what he is imparting than we would from someone dryly talking over our heads.

    Stewart cites a wealth of statistics: the Great Barrier Reef's 38% reduction of coral over the past 25 years; 44% of America's electricity still coming from coal despite all the knowledge we've gleaned over the past half-century about the unquestionable warming effects of CO2 emissions; ocean acidification that is happening faster and faster, destroying our seas' ecosystem; Canada, China and many other nations being willful partners with the United States in mostly ignoring the ongoing threat, and man's continuing deforestation around the world (his sidebar animal species/forest scenes filmed in Madagascar are simultaneously comical and tragic).

    Much of this data is already available and has been for some time to the interested. What Stewart's movie is attempting to do is to make this knowledge more mainstream to the thankfully slowly-dwindling number of people and governments around the world still denying the obvious. The director attended a number of world conferences on the subject, and in REVOLUTION he shares some of the speeches by leaders, politicians and scientists at these affairs, as well as encouraging shots of young activists before and after the events, all of them galvanized about making other nations aware of our responsibility to lower our burning of fossil fuels and lessen our reliance on automobiles.

    What we all have to realize is that only 10% of the ongoing warming the earth is experiencing is happening in our air – 90% is occurring in our oceans. Our upper atmosphere has become a heat-trapping blanket over the near-two centuries since the Industrial Revolution, a simple fact that anyone with an aquarium and a little fuel and tinder can experimentally recreate at home. And despite being cyclical, the (literally) countless tons of pollutants and hot emissions that have been spewed into our air over those years have made warming increase exponentially, with thousands of instances including the 4-year drought in California, many Arctic ice caps becoming mostly lakes, numerous animal species dying off : all making the necessity of human intervention crystal-clear.

    Please GOOGLE NextGen Climate for more information on what you can do to both learn more about something we ALL should be aware of, and to hopefully start changing the mindsets of our acquaintances who may still be stuck in the past. We're all in this together, and for anyone who cares about the world we're going to leave to our children's children's children, as well as the health and continuance of our animal species, forests and natural wonders, this is all necessary knowledge.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Referenced in Sea of Life (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Wide Blue Sea
      Written by Jeff Rona

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Revolution?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 12, 2013 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United States
      • Mexico
      • Micronesia
      • Japan
      • Australia
      • Brazil
      • Hong Kong
      • Madagascar
      • Papua New Guinea
      • South Africa
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Революция
    • Production companies
      • Diatribe Pictures
      • Foundation Features
      • Revolutionary Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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