DiCaprio’s ‘Before
The Flood’ Drowns in Sea of Green Hypocrisy
by Tom Richard 28 Oct 2016
Leonardo DiCaprio claims
his new film will illustrate the dangers of climate change.
Before the Flood
is a new “documentary” that chronicles DiCaprio’s carbon-spewing journey
across the planet, where he relies on natural disasters to prove that global
warming is occurring and catastrophic.
The Oscar-winning actor speaks to scientists,
politicians, and academics who provide dramatic soundbites about man-made
global warming, but he fails to include a single quote from the thousands of
scientists, politicians, and academics who vehemently disagree with these
soundbites.
The United Nations has made frequent use of the Hollywood
star in an effort to demonize fossil fuel use. The result? DiCaprio’s new film
is something the actor claims will “scare the hell” out of people.
But the only thing more likely to scare audiences is the
aw-shucks, privileged dilettante who says he’s just a “normal guy” like
everybody else. In reality, DiCaprio is a party boy who loves his
carbon-emitting playthings as much as he enjoys preaching the global
warming gospel. It’s a skill he acquired from Al Gore, after a 1998 visit to
the White House. Shortly thereafter, he formed the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation
to address environmental concerns.
The documentary comes at a curious time, since DiCaprio
and his foundation are caught up in a scandal that has launched calls for him to step down
from his post as a “U.N. Messenger of Peace with a special focus on climate change.”
His foundation has allegedly received millions of
embezzled dollars from Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund—called
1Malaysia Development Berhad (or 1MDB)—as payment for his starring in
and producing The Wolf of Wall Street, a film about an unscrupulous
stockbroker. DiCaprio now says he will return the money, but that may prove
difficult given that his “donor-advised fund” is attached to the billion-dollar
California Community Foundation.
DiCaprio’s lavish lifestyle
hasn’t stopped the media from praising his work as a climate change demagogue.
Editors and reporters often quote DiCaprio for saying that the fossil fuel
industry should be “taxed out of existence”—an ironic suggestion since fossil
fuels have enabled him to zip around the world to attend environmentally themed
parties or lecture world
leaders to address the climate crisis.
DiCaprio’s antipathy toward fossil fuels prompted ABC’s Good
Morning America to call him an “incredibly committed” man who is “not just
talking the talk” but is actually “advocating bold changes to tackle climate
change.” The well-paid staff at ABC may not have considered that
multimillionaire DiCaprio can afford any carbon tax imposed on him.
Unfortunately, most Americans are barely making ends meet in the Obama economy.
The hypocrisy is indeed entertaining, however, and
examples abound of DiCaprio’s carbon profligacy. Three months before standing
in front of the U.N. and lamenting, “If we do not act together, we will surely
perish,” DiCaprio took a private jet to Brazil. That flight was needed so the
actor could borrow an Abu Dhabi billionaire’s 470-foot yacht to throw an
extravagant party.
When DiCaprio picked up an environmental award in New York City last May, he
was able to do so by taking a private jet from Cannes, then flying straight back
to France on another private jet for a model-packed fundraiser the next
evening. That’s an 8,000-mile carbon
footprint.
DiCaprio has a track record of jet-set jaunts, though. In
2013, DiCaprio and fellow actor Jonah Hill flew from Sydney, Australia, to Las
Vegas on a chartered 747 to celebrate New Year’s Eve at two separate parties. A
private jet’s carbon emissions are 130 times greater than those of a commercial
aircraft.
Some high-powered anti-fossil fuel groups, including the
Sierra Club, have indeed criticized DiCaprio for not “walking the talk” and for
setting a bad example of environmentalism.
Those complaints are likely a small matter since DiCaprio
can seek solace in two adjoining properties in Hollywood, as well as a
six-bedroom mansion in Palm Springs, Calif., two apartments in Battery Park
City, N.Y., and an apartment in Greenwich Village. In 2014, he sold his
beachfront estate in Malibu.
DiCaprio admits his “footprint is probably bigger than
most” and in his documentary he includes footage of insults he’s received on
that point. But the overall acting in Before the Flood is surprisingly
wooden. When we see DiCaprio meeting with President Obama, the interview comes
across as stilted and scripted. DiCaprio appears to fawn over the president,
and the glowing admiration feels uncomfortable. That sort of emoting may work
in films, but not in documentaries.
But back to the oh-so-high life. DiCaprio now owns a
personal party yacht and has rented another, helpful distractions from his work
sitting on the boards of various green groups such as the World Wildlife Fund, Natural
Resources Defense Council, Pristine Seas, and other organizations.
The yacht life functions as an amusing counterpoint to the worldview expressed
in DiCaprio’s previous documentary, The 11th Hour, in which
he demanded the world switch to 100 percent renewable energy.
Arguably the most notable thing DiCaprio ever said was,
“I am not a scientist, but I don’t need to be. Because the world’s scientific
community has spoken, and they have given us our prognosis: if we do not act
together, we will surely perish.”
At the close of Before the Flood, DiCaprio
addresses the U.N. and says, “The world is now watching. You are the last best
hope of Earth, or you and all of the things we cherish, are history.” One
wonders if the greatest hope would be DiCaprio and his celebrity ilk changing
their self-indulgent behavior to avert an endlessly touted two degrees of
disastrous warming.
It should be noted the mainstream media is already
heaping praise on DiCaprio’s new documentary despite its many shortfalls,
calling it visionary and chilling.
Yes, the film demonstrates stunning photography courtesy
of Antonio Rossi (a documentary pro). But it gets drowned out by the film’s
preachy writing, courtesy of Mark Monroe (The Cove, Chasing Ice).
The entire modus operandi of the documentary is to scare you witless. Al Gore
must be pleased with his pupil. Not short on money, the film employs spiffy
animation, with one showing a pre-polluted Earth vs. a post-polluted Earth, as
seen from space.
The structure of Before the Flood is both
repetitive and rehearsed. First, dole out misleading data with disturbing
imagery. Then have an alarmist say something dramatic about the data. Then pan
to DiCaprio shaking his head in mock disbelief. Afterward, tell the viewers the
customary alarmist refrain: “Time is running out” therefore “we must change our
ways” and “this is what we must do.” Shake and repeat.
Before the Flood shows the viewer a new DiCaprio
character seemingly possessed by Al Gore. This is simply identity-driven
politics in overdrive: save the planet and you can save yourself. Heck, even Pope Francis gave DiCaprio his global warming blessings (a
favor DiCaprio returned by giving the Pontiff a cameo).
Other science dilettantes who pop up in the film include
former President Bill Clinton, John Kerry, Elon Musk, U.N. chief Ban Ki-Moon, and other
progressive luminaries.
Before the Flood is 90 minutes of pre-approved
green propaganda. It airs on the National Geographic channel on Oct. 30, 2016, just ahead
of the elections.
Bill Clinton
William J. Clinton
is an adviser for the 2016 Hillary
Rodham Clinton presidential campaign, and the founder of the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton
Foundation.
Note: Ready PAC (Ready For Hillary) supported the 2016 Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential
campaign.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
George
Soros is the founder & chairman for the Open Society Foundations, a co-chair, national finance council for
the Ready PAC (Ready For Hillary),
and was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society.
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Climate Reality Project, and the Brookings Institution (think
tank).
Leonardo DiCaprio
is a trustee at the Natural Resources
Defense Council, a director at the World
Wildlife Fund, and a United Nations
messenger of peace.
Albert A. Gore Jr.
is the chairman for the Climate Reality
Project.
Cameron F. Kerry
is a fellow at the Brookings Institution (think tank), and John F. Kerry’s brother.
Teresa Heinz
Kerry is an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank),
and married to John F. Kerry.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank), and the International Peace
Institute.
Ban
Ki-Moon is an honorary chair for the International
Peace Institute, and the secretary general for the United Nations.
Mortimer B.
Zuckerman is a director at the International
Peace Institute, and 2013 fundraiser co-chair for the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation.
William J. Clinton
is the founder of the Bill, Hillary
& Chelsea Clinton Foundation, and an adviser for the 2016 Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential
campaign.
Ready
PAC (Ready For Hillary)
supported the 2016 Hillary Rodham
Clinton presidential campaign.
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