Tomorrow

    Tomorrow
    2015

    Synopsis

    Climate is changing. Instead of showing all the worst that can happen, this documentary focuses on the people suggesting solutions and their actions.

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    Cast

    • Cyril DionSelf
    • Mélanie LaurentSelf
    • Pierre RabhiSelf
    • Vandana ShivaSelf
    • Jeremy RifkinSelf
    • Anthony BarnoskySelf
    • Elizabeth HadlySelf
    • Olivier De SchutterSelf
    • Jan GehlSelf
    • Rob HopkinsSelf

    Recommendations

    • 90

      The New York Times

      It’s refreshing to see concrete solutions at work, many of them at the grass-roots level. And the optimism of those countering ineffective politicians and big business is infectious.
    • 75

      San Francisco Chronicle

      The film urges decentralization and bottom-up decision making as tools in remedying problems of global warming, food production and the like. The tone is more upbeat than you might expect, and there’s a certain glossiness to the movie that’s a refreshing change from some of its more dour documentary siblings.
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      Laurent and Dion’s passionate, off-the-beaten-path primer advocates thinking globally but acting locally with community-driven, grassroots alternatives that aren’t affected by any executive orders.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      This playfully made exposé should be required viewing for anyone wondering what they could do to pitch in and save the planet.
    • 70

      Village Voice

      What Laurent and Dion do best is present pockets of progressive change as blueprints for idealism in action.
    • 70

      Variety

      When Tomorrow starts to make intellectual as well as geographical leaps and to draw macroeconomic, political, and social factors into its bright-eyed, approachable orbit, that’s when cynicism gives way to admiration, and admiration can flare into inspiration.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      There are some inspiring people in the film, and one wishes it had been edited to focus more on their stories. In the end, Tomorrow is less a movie than a long public service announcement.

    Seen by

    • endlessness