| on Apr 23, 2008, 10:24 AM E.S.T.
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Al Gore loves Hollywood. Hollywood loves Al Gore. And why not? If reality wouldn't provide the truth he needed, Hollywood conveniently manufactured a facsimile.
Reality
and fantasy merge in Hollywood and apparently An Inconvenient Truth
(sic) was no different true to the entertainment world's operating
motif. The movie's signature shot of the Antarctic ice shelves was
actually
Sculpted from Styrofoam and later scanned into a computer, the ice shelf "flyover" looks real.
And in
the saving the planet spirit of recycling garbage the Styrofoam flyover
shot was originally used in the 2004 Hollywood fantasy The Day After
Tomorrow. The special effects supervisor of that film stated
the
shot is a digital image. She was glad Al Gore used it in the
documentary since "It is one hell of a shot." Both movies use the shot
to convincingly portray global warming, but it is left to the audience
to decide if this created image can both entertain and educate us about
our changing planet.
Well
it certainly does educate us in Hollywood--and Gore--trickery and
puffery as neither inconveniently publicized its use in a supposed
accurate documentary. But apparently Al Gore successfully absorbed the
Hollywood mindset that truth is whatever aids the box office. Source
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