Thanks for your reply. It certainly softens the edge I felt off your previous posts. I apologize for the unnecessary edge on mine

. There's still some comments I'd like to discuss further.
{snip}
The reason I wrote the summary I did was because another forumite asked specifically about the film's opinions. He asked, I replied

.
I understand, but I felt the reply you gave for TCS was way too one-sided and lacked in essential aspects of conveying what the film is about (to me
Home is first of all an audiovisual experience, the content of the message comes after it).
I keep wondering just where did you derive these "opinions of the film" from? I listened closely, without hearing even once the word "bad", which you apparently heard hundreds of times

. I felt the film to be very emotionally appealing, but still to succesfully keep from bringing the black and white morals of good/bad into question. To me it was more of simply stating how things are (though this is where I felt the film
is lacking. To me a "how" always needs a complementing "why", or even an attempt at it, with sources provided).
Maybe how we interpret the films message depends on the already existing attitudes towards the issues discussed in the film...
The problem is that AGW isn't some backwater third world country in conflict, an obscure illness or some unknown animal in danger of extinction. It's front page news on every newspaper. It's been made into a blockbuster movie (cough, Al Gore, cough). "Raising awareness" is no longer needed, Al Gore took care of that years ago.
I agree to some extent. However, I would like to see you show inclusive evidence of your claim. I think people being "aware" of something doesn't mean they necessarily understand it, and even if they do, it's still a long way to where the majority alters their daily decisions based on actual knowledge of what's happening to/on earth. Also, measuring these things is difficult. This is where I think
Home can really make a difference. It's humane and still not judging. It's crying for action without putting pressure on certain explicit ways of acting. I think
Home can get peope active in ways that
Inconvenient Truth could never have.
Time will tell...but to me calling the film "more same old" and to advocate not watching it "because it doesn't add anything new", are major understatements. I accept you feel that way, no prob. But that was just the reason why I lashed back.
Look, I did love the beautiful and unsettling shots, and the music, and the fact that it discusses a serious issue. But it also does just parrot what's "in fashion" right now, without adding any new angles or anything. It does go over-the-top, which has turned lots off people away from the AGW issue already. This is legitimate criticism, I feel.
I'm not quite sure I understand what you mean by over-the-top. I'd be interested in hearing where you felt the film went "over-the-top" in ways that can turn people against it's agenda. Because I feel nowadays people are so utterly saturated by the mass of information they recieve, that if one wants to wake them up (ever more), the only way is to go (with taste) over-the-top, so to speak.
So if you have the will/time, please elaborate. It would be a valuable lesson for me in differing views.
Regarding alternatives to coal, I can only say I haven't got enough knowledge to actually debate on them. But the solar panels shown in the film were also on top of houses, and the windmill park was in the middle of the ocean, so I think these must not be either/or questions, but ones needing research to find where and when exactly what form of methods are most efficient. Please correct me if I'm wrong here.