Before the Flood, Leonardo DiCaprio documentary
Icebergs, again. But this time, it's not Titanic. According to Leonardo DiCaprio, movies can change the world. At least, that's the hope for his climate change documentary
There’s been some consternation about Leonardo DiCaprio
being appointed the UN Messenger of Peace and presenting climate-change doc Before the Flood. The sceptics wonder
why the beardy man-bunned embodiment of Hollywood excess (models, jets, etc.) is
openly advocating a global policy of restrained consumption. Where’s the
scientific background or the history of activism?
But it turns out that DiCaprio is a good choice to front the film. He’s keen to learn, sincerely concerned, and his reliance on layman’s terms gives viewers an entry point into a subject that’s characterised, in public debate, by myth and hijacked statistics. DiCaprio is also seriously connected (did you know that he’s very, very famous?), and is probably the reason director Fisher Stevens interview access to Barack Obama, UN General Ban Ki-moon, and Pope Francis. Friends in high places, and all that.
Stevens previously produced The Cove, a gut-wrenching exposé of dolphin ‘drive-hunting’ in Japan. Drive-hunting is the part of the whaling industry, by which dolphins are beached and slaughtered for supermarket meat, with a few being kept alive and sold into captivity; The Cove did a pretty good job of alerting the world to the barbaric method, and although Before the Flood’s subject is much bigger and trickier (can/should American filmmakers preach reduced consumption to developing nations when the US is one of the worst offenders, emissions-wise?), it’s more than just deflated doom-mongering, highlighting some of the short - and long-term solutions that might be humanity’s last hopes.
Before the Food is being screened as part of a limited three-day run at the Bertha DocHouse, part of the Curzon Bloomsbury in the Brunswick Centre
But it turns out that DiCaprio is a good choice to front the film. He’s keen to learn, sincerely concerned, and his reliance on layman’s terms gives viewers an entry point into a subject that’s characterised, in public debate, by myth and hijacked statistics. DiCaprio is also seriously connected (did you know that he’s very, very famous?), and is probably the reason director Fisher Stevens interview access to Barack Obama, UN General Ban Ki-moon, and Pope Francis. Friends in high places, and all that.
Stevens previously produced The Cove, a gut-wrenching exposé of dolphin ‘drive-hunting’ in Japan. Drive-hunting is the part of the whaling industry, by which dolphins are beached and slaughtered for supermarket meat, with a few being kept alive and sold into captivity; The Cove did a pretty good job of alerting the world to the barbaric method, and although Before the Flood’s subject is much bigger and trickier (can/should American filmmakers preach reduced consumption to developing nations when the US is one of the worst offenders, emissions-wise?), it’s more than just deflated doom-mongering, highlighting some of the short - and long-term solutions that might be humanity’s last hopes.
Before the Food is being screened as part of a limited three-day run at the Bertha DocHouse, part of the Curzon Bloomsbury in the Brunswick Centre
TRY CULTURE WHISPER
Receive free tickets & insider tips to unlock the best of London — direct to your inbox
What | Before the Flood, Leonardo DiCaprio documentary |
Where | Bertha Dochouse, The Brunswick, London, WC1N 1AW | MAP |
Nearest tube | Russell Square (underground) |
When |
21 Oct 16 – 23 Oct 16, Friday at 4pm, Saturday at 2pm, Sunday at 6.10pm |
Price | £7 - £9 |
Website | Click here for more details |