An Inconvenient Hour

Of all the things to make you pause, ticket in hand, before entering the Millerton Moviehouse, consider the first five minutes of “The 11th Hour,� the new documentary on climate change.

   No sooner have the lights dimmed and the advertisement’s for Tri-Corner real estate ended than we’re informed — against a backdrop of mudslides and oil spills — that “our biosphere is sick.â€�

   As if thing’s weren’t already bad enough, Leonardo DiCaprio appears to read an excerpt from “Consciousness and the Environment,â€� his summer term paper on global warming.

      Arriving in theaters a little more than a year after “An Inconvenient Truth,â€� “The 11th Hourâ€� was written and directed by the sisters Leila Conners Peterson and Nadia Conners, and narrated by DiCaprio, who also serves as film’s producer and, probably, its financier. In his previous roles (Howard Hughes and the doomed tough of “The Departedâ€� among them) DiCaprio has shown himself to be nothing if not ambitious. Having conquered Hollywood, the California Gomorrah, the actor has set out for the more pious territory of public service. He’s itching to inherit Al Gore’s title of First Citizen.

   Damned if I believe it myself, but watching “The 11th Hourâ€� I began to miss Gore, with his attempts at a humorous and folksy wisdom. “The 11th Hourâ€� is so solemn and anxious as to make “An Inconvenient Truthâ€� look like, say, a National Geographic special on the joy of fly-fishing. That said, if “The 11th Hourâ€� is easy to ridicule, it is also possible to appreciate the documentary as a kind of public service, something noble and entered into with less than joy.

   “The 11th Hourâ€� is fashioned in the mold of a PBS documentary, with 50 or so scientists, statesmen and assorted figures discussing the environmental challenges of the 21st century, spliced in with various images and graphs supporting their conclusions.

   To their credit, Peterson and Conners have gathered a diverse cast, which counts among its members Mikhail Gorbachev, former CIA director James Woolsey and the physicist Stephen Hawking. (There are a number of less impressive figures, too, thrown in for the bargain. Here I am thinking of the pale, bearded figure who talked of the wonders of mycofiltration.)

   Their thesis is simple and unanimously agreed upon. Nature is dying: overpopulated, overconsumed, verging on collapse.

   The villains are rounded up and named. They include carbon dioxide, deforestation, an oil-based economy, all contributing to what one environmentalist refers to as a “convergent crisisâ€� of climate change and mass-extinction.

   These are symptoms.

   Really, the problem is man, all 6 billion of us and counting, crowding the world with highways, power plants, and farmland.    

   To keep things moving, the filmmakers interrupt the interviews with images of environmental collapse.    Appeals are made to both reason and emotion, the latter often outweighing the former.

   In one instance, we’re told that 90 percent of the ocean’s large fish have disappeared, and then we are subtly shown an image of a seal being clubbed to death.

   “The 11th Hourâ€� brightens a bit at its conclusion. It’s inspiring to hear Woolsey talk of the American mobilization in six months following Pearl Harbor as a blueprint for retooling the economy in an environmental mode. Others invoke America’s capacity for technological and industrial achievement, as proof that the country can change its gas-guzzling ways, if only it would summon the willpower.

   The flesh is weak.

   Maybe that’s why “The 11th Hourâ€� is such a bad-tasting cure.

Latest News

Mountaineers fall 3-0 to Wamogo

Anthony Foley caught Chase Ciccarelli in a rundown when HVRHS played Wamogo Wednesday, May 1.

Riley Klein

LITCHFIELD — Housatonic Valley Regional High School varsity baseball dropped a 3-0 decision to Wamogo Regional High School Wednesday, May 1.

The Warriors kept errors to a minimum and held the Mountaineers scoreless through seven innings. HVRHS freshman pitcher Chris Race started the game strong with no hits through the first three innings, but hiccups in the fourth gave Wamogo a lead that could not be caught.

Keep ReadingShow less
The artist called ransome

‘Migration Collage' by ransome

Alexander Wilburn

If you claim a single sobriquet as your artistic moniker, you’re already in a club with some big names, from Zendaya to Beyoncé to the mysterious Banksy. At Geary, the contemporary art gallery in Millerton founded by New Yorkers Jack Geary and Dolly Bross Geary, a new installation and painting exhibition titled “The Bitter and the Sweet” showcases the work of the artist known only as ransome — all lowercase, like the nom de plume of the late Black American social critic bell hooks.

Currently based in Rhinebeck, N.Y., ransome’s work looks farther South and farther back — to The Great Migration, when Jim Crow laws, racial segregation, and the public violence of lynching paved the way for over six million Black Americans to seek haven in northern cities, particularly New York urban areas, like Brooklyn and Baltimore. The Great Migration took place from the turn of the 20th century up through the 1970s, and ransome’s own life is a reflection of the final wave — born in North Carolina, he found a new home in his youth in New Jersey.

Keep ReadingShow less
Four Brothers ready for summer season

Hospitality, ease of living and just plain fun are rolled into one for those who are intrigued by the leisure-time Caravana experience at the family-owned Four Brothers Drive-in in Amenia. John Stefanopoulos, pictured above, highlights fun possibilities offered by Hotel Caravana.

Leila Hawken

The month-long process of unwrapping and preparing the various features at the Four Brothers Drive-In is nearing completion, and the imaginative recreational destination will be ready to open for the season on Friday, May 10.

The drive-in theater is already open, as is the Snack Shack, and the rest of the recreational features are activating one by one, soon to be offering maximum fun for the whole family.

Keep ReadingShow less