Get us in your inbox

Home

  • Film
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
  1. LAZY DAYS Huppert and Leroux look out toward the open road.
    LAZY DAYS Huppert and Leroux look out toward the open road.
  2. 799.fi_.homeREV
    ALL IS NOT WELL Villagers gather at a ravaged watering hole.
Advertising

Time Out says

3 out of 5 stars

Mother Earth will not be ignored---not if Glenn Close has anything to say about it. The Damages star narrates Yann Arthus-Bertrand's pro-environment documentary with such cocksure conviction that you cower in your seat, feeling guilty about all the times you skipped recycling the Sunday paper. The visuals are also humbling; the film is composed entirely of impressive aerial footage, which Arthus-Bertrand shot in 54 countries over several years. These crystal-clear images are both awe-inspiring (arctic ice floes; tropical forests) and horrifying (rivers dirtied by pollution; cattle packed tightly into factory-farm pens). But soon enough, the astonishment wears off and monotony sets in---seen one sweeping helicopter shot, you've seen 'em all, especially when they're stretched over an hour and a half.

That doesn't stop Close from bloviating as if she were Moses bearing the freshly etched commandments: "Faster and faster!" she intones whenever a destructive symbol of industry pops up onscreen, though more laughable is her portentous, oft-repeated call to arms: "It's too late to be a pessimist!" You'd like to answer back with a dismissive snap and a "Girl, please!"---even as you sympathize with the movie's overarching sentiments. We certainly need all the ecological jeremiads we can get. But must they be so numbingly pedantic?

Watch the trailer

See more in Film

Written by Keith Uhlich

Release Details

  • Duration:120 mins
Advertising
You may also like
You may also like