“I’ve been inspired by ‘Don’t Look Up,’” she says, “and Adam McKay, his body of work, his extraordinary ability to take these tragic situations and use humor and satire to make an entertaining story.” Despite the dust-up around McKay’s divisive climate change allegory, which some critics accused of making light of the climate crisis, Lessin believes that laughter is often the perfect vehicle to confront the existential threat to our planet. It’s a tactic of laughing grimly into the abyss that might also sound familiar to audiences who followed the debate around a certain star-studded Netflix extravaganza last year – a comparison Lessin doesn’t shy away from. But he does it in a way that’s so entertaining, that’s funny, that’s cutting, that you don’t even realize it’s happening sometimes.” “He’s actually talking to the audience and challenging the audience about who they think they are. And it’s one of the things that, in our work with Michael, he always does really well,” says Deal. “You don’t want to tell people what they want to know. The duo has also produced several of Michael Moore’s films, including “Fahrenheit 9/11,” Academy Award winner “Bowling for Columbine,” “Capitalism: A Love Story” and “Where to Invade Next.” Deal praised the rabble-rousing, populist filmmaker and activist’s ability to inform, incite and entertain – often in the same dizzying breath – and said a similar approach will animate “Sink or $wim.” Lessin and Emma Pildes also co-directed “The Janes,” a Sundance selection this year, which tells the story of the female-staffed underground service that provided over 11,000 illegal abortions to women in need between 19. They also directed and produced (along with Gillian Caldwell) “ Citizen Koch,” which documented the rise of the Tea Party that laid the foundation for the election of Donald Trump and premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. The Brooklyn-based filmmakers were nominated for an Academy Award for their 2008 debut “ Trouble the Water,” a documentary that examined the impact and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans from the perspective of a family that stayed at home during the storm. In some cases, just monetizing climate change.”Īmong the characters staking claims to the new frontier are Wall Street speculators buying up land and water rights real estate developers building opulent floating islands entrepreneurs towing icebergs to parched cities (or melting them into premium bottled water) doomsday realtors selling posh bunkers and climate-proof sanctuaries and private firefighters partnering with insurance companies to protect mansions from wildfires. In some cases, it’s worsening the crisis. It’s far from a portrait of earnest green energy advocates installing solar panels or erecting windmills to wean the world off fossil fuels, says Lessin. Download our Remote Datasheet here.He adds: “The climate is changing, we’re causing it, and some people are making a killing on it.”Ĭurrently in development, “Sink or $wim” will follow a colorful cast of climate prospectors, profiteers and their ultra-rich clientele, whose interrelated storylines will shed light on how the privileged few will survive and prosper at the expense of those without economic or political power, so long as the free market continues to dictate the world’s response to the global climate crisis. You’ll benefit by better communications with your customers, vendors and employees.
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