Although it contains its moments of doom and gloom about the potential effects of climate change, the excellent documentary Carbon Nation is an inspiring look at the many recent advances in clean energy and green technologies.
Director Peter Byck opted for corny graphics, a wall of statistics, a voice-of-God narrator, and a xylophonic score, but behind the infomercial presentation are solid ideas that warrant scrutiny.
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Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
It makes you wonder, ultimately, how the carbon footprint created by the film will stand up to the test of time.
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San Francisco ChronicleWalter Addiego
San Francisco ChronicleWalter Addiego
Carbon Nation serves us a full portion of scary statistics, but overall tries to accentuate the positive.
This film seems blissfully unaware that political obstructionists are paralyzing the legislative process; that deep-pocketed influence peddlers have a vested interest in maintaining the fossil fuel culture; that, in general, people resist change.
Wind power plus solar power equals hot air in the propaganda piece Carbon Nation, a documentary so disconnected from reality it could have been produced by President Obama's speechwriters.