The 11th Hour

The 11th Hour

Leonardo DiCaprio's "The 11th Hour" is a feature length documentary concerning the environmental crises caused by human actions and their impact on the planet. The 11th Hour documents the cumulative impact of these actions upon the planet's life systems and calls for restorative action through a reshaping of human activity.

Synopsis

Drought. Famine. Severe flooding. Record rainfall. Hurricanes. Acid rain. The highest average temperatures in recorded history. Catastrophe is reported on the nightly news as isolated incidents. But are these incidents isolated, or pieces of a larger global puzzle that could unlock humanity's future?

In the history of the planet, humanity's time on earth has been short but powerful. The human drive to ensure its own survival and quality of life has revolutionized industry, science, nutrition and medicine. But it has also effected unprecedented changes in the delicate balance that makes life on earth possible.

Shaped by oceans and rainforests that generate oxygen, absorb carbon dioxide, govern climate, weather and temperature, the planet earth is under siege. The alchemy of natural greenhouse gases that enables life has been augmented with chemicals from tail pipes and smoke stacks.

For every truckload of product produced, many more truckloads of waste are created. The oceans have been flooded with mercury, heavy metals, and toxic chemicals. The forests are disappearing, deserts are widening, the arctic sea ice is melting, the permafrost has begun to crack. The earth has grown warmer. Not since a meteor hit the planet 55 million years ago have so many forms of life gone extinct.

But are these changes to the earth permanent? Or are they puzzle pieces that, if connected, reveal a larger story that needs to be told; a human story that takes into account who we are and the state of our relationship to this planet, our only home. We are in an environmental age whether we like it or not.

Narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, written and directed by Leila Conners Petersen and Nadia Conners. The 11th Hour is produced by Chuck Castleberry, Brian Gerber, Conners Petersen and DiCaprio. The 11th Hour describes the last moment when change is possible. The film explores how humanity has arrived at this moment; how we live, how we impact the earth's ecosystems, and what we can do to change our course. The film features dialogues with experts from all over the world, including former Soviet Prime Minister Mikhail Gorbachev, renowned scientist Stephen Hawking, former head of the CIA R. James Woolsey and sustainable design experts William McDonough and Bruce Mau in addition to over 50 leading scientists, thinkers and leaders who present the facts and discuss the most important issues that face our planet.

Film Website: www.11thhourfilm.com

Take Action Community Website: www.11thhouraction.com

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For resources for organizing screenings and a full list of films, go to www.relocalize.net/screenings.

Shelby Tay's picture

Review of the 11th Hour

Here's a review of the 11th Hour by eculp, posted on his blog (http://www.relocalize.net/leonardos_decaprios_11th_hour):

I saw the 11th hour last night, and was prepared to be scared. But, the film had the 'scary message' only for the first half of the film, and then gave us a foundation for hope and actual examples of a sustainable future. The film was presented in the form of 'sensationalist vignette'-(similar to a major news broadcast) mixed with interviews by dozens of recognized experts.

The new messages I gleaned from film is that:
1)We are living on 'dead energy' -fossil fuels- a form of solar energy that was created and stored from past milleniums.
2) We are addicted to consuming this dead energy because we are no longer connected to the earth - we travel at speeds that are unnatural, we live and work in artificial light, and we have no idea where are food and clothing come from. -there is little, if no connection to nature's rhythms. We are looking for a reconnectedness, and the media and corporations are more than happy to supply a substitute of consumption- sugar, alcohol, tobacco, luxury, etc.
3) Being at the top of the food chain, we are huge impact on the planet's ecosystem, and that the world we live in, is actually a reflection of what is inside us.

Are we at the 11th hour? or is it 11:59?

johnw's picture

11th Hour question

The movie has not gotten to my neck of the woods yet. So, for those of you who have seen it please tell me what is said in regards on nuclear power. Thank you!!

KathyMJ's picture

11th Hour Review

I saw this at a screening about a week ago - I have to say I really WANTED To like this but found it disappointing overall. Most of it is "preaching to the choir" and quite pedeantic. I felt like I was being repeatedly lectured about things I was already very much aware of - and that gets tedious. I could see this film being good in a middle school or high school classroom setting to sparl discussion. Certainly Leonardo DeCaprio being in it will help hold the yout attention span. I did like the last third of movie whichever began to offer new solutions and out of the box thinking for some of these problems, I would much rather have heard a LOT more from people like Bill McDonough and Betsy Taylor and that been the bulk of the film, after a short "why we need to do it" intro. Maybe the next enviro -filmmaker which jump on that. Despite this encouraging section ofthe film, I left the theater depressed -- the overall mood and mesaage of the film is a real downer and not very optimistic. I think the title gives you that at least they are not misleading anyone. I just don't see many people shelling out $10 to be lectured for 90 minutes - even if it is by a young, good looking movie star.

Shelby Tay's picture

Preview by ECLA PA - review

This review of the 11th Hour was posted by Larry Menkes of Earth Charter Lifeboat Academy in Pennsylvania.
(original post at http://www.relocalize.net/node/7045)
Larry Menkes, ECLA PA, 8/2/07
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Through the courtesy of Warner Independent Pictures and Action PA's DVS list we were able to preview this important addition to major films on the climate crisis and peak oil. The film is a must see for any of us working for change. It is not "the next Inconvenient Truth". It will move public awareness up a notch, keep the conversation alive and well, and become an important resource and teaching tool when it comes out in DVD.

It opens on October 17 in NY and LA., Oct. 24th in Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Seattle, San Francisco, Washington DC., and August 31st in Albuquerque, Baltimore, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Des Moines, Honolulu, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Miami, Milwaukee, Monterey, Nashville, New Haven, New Orleans, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, Santa Barbara, St. Louis, W. Palm Beach.

Leonardo DiCaprio's "The 11th Hour" is a feature length documentary (about 90 min's.) concerning the environmental crises caused by human actions and their impact on the planet. The 11th Hour documents the cumulative impact of these actions upon the planet's life systems and calls for restorative action through a reshaping of human activity.

Some of us had an opportunity to see a preview of this film on 7/30. It opened with a lot of talking heads interspersed with relevant footage related to the nature of the problem. About 3/5ths of the way into the film it shifted into the "large picture" of solutions, presented with more "heads". There was an emphasis on "biomimicry".

My take on this is that it probably won't win any Academy Awards but is a welcome adition to what may become a long line of public awareness movies. It won't turn the tide (the tide's already turning); it may hasten the turn. It will probably be very popular with high school and college audiences and does a good job explaining the situation and it's potential antidotes.

The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of the American Dream (Produced by Barry Silverthorn) (78 min.)
The definitive documentary about Peak Oil and the economic chaos that it's already beginning to cause. A must see, but very powerful dystopic vision of our future.
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