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Chasing Ice (2012)
A visceral experience
Obviously it's preaching to the converted here in Berkeley, but this movie is to global-warming deniers what sunlight is to vampires. You can't sit there and see these glaciers melting before your eyes and not be shaken. I had no idea it was happening so fast.
Regarding movie production values, it's a DOCUMENTARY folks, and a pretty darn good one - no one in my group was bored at any time. Really good story about this guy's obsession to document it, and awesome (in its original sense) nature photography, with some cataclysmic moments. We could hear some booms and crashes from the big-budget extravaganza Cloud Atlas playing in the theater next door, but I think this movie was just as cool, and it's all real.
@ JustCuriosity: Yes, it is an emotional appeal, and that's the point. Most people who are in denial don't have a clue of the scale of the problem and don't care, or they care in a shallow way about "the environment", but that's seen as some abstract thing out there somewhere, not related to their daily lives.
@Tracy Allard: Yes, the science and models are solid; climate scientists have been saying that for years, and they've been trying to get across to the rest of the world how serious the problem is. Meanwhile, the right-wing idiocracy has been shouting them down for crying wolf and even accusing them of fraud. This footage is undeniable evidence of the reality of global warming, and it's vital that as many of the public see it as possible.
I'm trained as a scientist and I'm painfully aware that 90% of Americans could care less about models - any mention of math or anything they don't understand instantly causes their eyes to glaze over. In fact, a growing proportion of Americans think that science is just a bunch of hooey made up by eggheads to pull something over on the rest of society. As Balog notes, half of us still don't believe in evolution. Please read Charles Pierce's Idiot America for more on the scope and magnitude of that problem.
A whole generation of us has been raised to believe that any nonsense can be true if only it's repeated in the media loudly and often enough. The only way that people are going to update their perception of reality is if they are forcibly shaken awake by events such as a hurricane in Manhattan - or perhaps sitting comfortably in a theater watching a piece of a glacier the size of Manhattan suddenly fall off.
The Witches of Eastwick (1987)
Underrated Gem
I liked this movie more on repeated viewings, when I began noticing subtleties that I had missed the first time. It's an understated adaptation, certainly reading the book would help but I think it tells the story quite well on its own, and it's full of clever touches that the second and third time around made me smile and think "that's just perfect", with lots of dry humor scattered throughout. I disagree with the comment about it being a "hash". Being about the power of the unconscious and supernatural (or more precisely the primal power of nature, specifically feminine power and nature) it works well as a mood piece, and the sparse plotting leaves the viewer who is open to it to join the three women on their inner voyage of discovery. For example, they were all shocked and frightened (as we were) at the earth cracking under their feet during their argument. The conclusion is subtle but powerful; male and female forces in a fragile balance, with the women really in charge.