Thursday, March 11, 2010

Wall-E

An environmental review of Wall-E from Wired's Brandon Keim:

"The decade’s most powerful environmental film doesn’t star Al Gore or Greenpeace activists, but a trash-compacting, Hello Dolly-loving robot with a cockroach for a best friend.

Backdropping the Chaplin-esque romantic robot comedy is a barren Earth smothered in junk, deserted but for the movie’s eponymous hero, who is fated to compress garbage under sandstorm skies until his battered processors wind down.

When Wall-E meets the not-so-subtly-named Eve — Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator — love is as inevitable and precious as a seedling that emerges, against all odds, from the waste. But overriding Eve’s heart is her prime directive, and Wall-E hitches a ride as she takes the sprout to her ship.

(The unsullied starscape into which they burst from the Earth’s satellite-encrusted atmosphere is a moment of visual bliss and a reminder of the inspirational transcendence of space, however light-polluted our view now may be.)

Here the movie takes a mythological jump: the seedling is an olive branch delivered to a vessel waiting, like Noah’s ark, for word of land.
Aboard it, however, are not two of every different thing, but endless numbers of the same thing — people living in consumer coccoons provided by the Buy’N'Large corporation.

Promised that "There’s No Need to Walk!" by By’N'Large’s ubiquitous billboards, the couchbound exiles spend their days in a haze of flat-screened entertainment and oversized sodas. In a perfect metaphor for the lazy thoughtlessnes that ultimately ruined their planet, they’re literally too lazy to carry their own weight.

A whiff of puritanism and smugness is soon evident, and I was reminded of Freeman Dyson’s description of environmentalism as secular religion. Any religion is prone to orthodoxy and dogma — but just as some religious practices are simple common sense, so are the tenets of environmentalism.

People rely on other Earthly life for both survival and pleasure; our habits affect it in self-defeating ways. I’m willing to accept on faith the universal poignance of the ship captain’s remarks upon return: "It looks like Earth. But where’s the blue sky? Where’s the grass?"

Wall-E creator Pixar has disavowed the movie’s environmental overtones, and little wonder. Parent corporation Walt Disney is the essence of inoffensive, all-inclusive and merchandise-friendly branding. But even if its bubble-wrapped tie-ins end up clogging our great-grandchildren’s landfills, Wall-E’s point is no less potent. And if your kids want Wall-E toys, buy them a planter and some seeds."

See the post at Wired here.

Jack Johnson, Environmentalist

Jack Johnson mixes music and environmentalism. Read about some of his choices in this excerpt from "Walk Tall and Act Natural", by Jon Cohen, in Outside Magazine.

"Johnson's music has a message, too, but it's not so much in the songs as in how he brings them to the public. He's toured on a biodiesel bus since 2005, and he requires that performance venues buy carbon offsets for every show and compost the organic waste from his concerts. He's staged the Kokua Festival in Oahu each spring since 2004—playing with friends like Eddie Vedder, Ben Harper, and Willie Nelson—and donates proceeds to the Kokua Hawaii Foundation, which he started to support environmental education in schools.

With the recent remodeling of the Brushfire offices, he and his business partner, Emmett Malloy—cousin of the pro-surfer Malloy brothers, Chris, Keith, and Dan—now operate one of the most eco-minded record companies in the industry. The Brushfire studios run on electricity provided by 32 rooftop solar panels; the building is insulated with blue-jeans scraps and outfitted with compact fluorescent lighting and low-flush toilets. Johnson even recorded Sleep Through the Static, his new album, which hits stores in February, in analog, on a hand-me-down 24-track Studer deck that reportedly once taped a David Bowie album."

Read the whole article here. Image by Jeffy Lipsky for Outside Magazine.

James Cameron, Avatar


An Excerpt from an interview with James Cameron about Avatar:

"Was he looking to change the world?

We are at a real fork in the road where we can stick with business as usual or we can change. If we don’t change, things are going to get pretty dark, pretty quick. The first step to galvanizing people to action is getting them thinking about the problem. I have no illusions that an entertainment film is going to change the world. But you can have a small incremental effect by having an emotional impact. This is not a film that teaches in the way that “ An Inconvenient Truth” did. It’s not meant to be preachy. Between the lines of what is basically kind of an action-adventure story, you can have power in creating emotional response."

Read the whole blog post at Dot Earth. Image from Flickr.

Michael Pollan on the Daily Show

Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma, Food Rules, and more, makes his case to Jon Stewart on The Daily Show.

The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Michael Pollan
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The Slow Food Movement, Repackaged

The Farm to School Program holds an annual contest inviting students to define what real food means to them in a video. Check out this creative endeavor by a group of 5th graders in New Jersey...



See more entries here.