Current:Home > FinanceThere's a new 'Climate Reality Check' test — these 3 Oscar-nominated features passed -MoneyBase
There's a new 'Climate Reality Check' test — these 3 Oscar-nominated features passed
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:45:38
Though it undoubtedly sends a strong feminist message, no one would describe Barbie as a movie about the impacts of human-caused climate change.
Yet the topic sneaks in.
"You are killing the planet with your glorification of rampant consumerism!" says Sasha, the teenage character played by Ariana Greenblatt, in her rant about the many ways in which Barbie is bad.
It's because of this line that the pinkest and perkiest of summer blockbusters passed the new Climate Reality Check. It's a new test, directed at writers, producers and other entertainment industry creatives, that aims to measure the presence of climate change on screen by evaluating all 31 feature films nominated for any Academy Award this year. Documentaries and shorts weren't considered.
This simple new test was inspired by the famous Bechdel Test invented by cartoonist Alison Bechdel in the mid-1980s to measure the presence of women in movies and other forms of fiction. It was created by climate change storytelling consultancy Good Energy in collaboration with the Buck Lab for Climate and Environment at Colby College in Maine.
"The test is, does climate change exist in the world of your story? And if so, does a character know it?" said Good Energy CEO and founder Anna Jane Joyner.
A movie must also meet two additional criteria to be eligible for the Climate Reality Check:
"That it's set on this Earth," Joyner said. "And that it takes place now or in the future."
Many Oscar-nominated features disqualified
The Climate Reality Check's rules actually disqualify many of this year's nominated feature films, including stories set in the past like Killers of the Flower Moon — even though one of that film's major themes is the dangers of fossil fuels.
Matthew Schneider-Mayerson, associate professor of English and environmental studies at Colby College and Good Energy's main collaborator on the Climate Reality Check, admitted the new test has some blind spots, such as excluding films that might not mention climate change directly, but instead point to it through allegory — as is sometimes the case with sci-fi, fantasy and historical films — or by modeling sustainable behaviors.
"It's possible for some films to include positive climate actions, for example, people installing renewable energy in their homes or deciding to go vegetarian," Schneider-Mayerson said. "This test doesn't necessarily catch those actions unless they're sort of more or less explicitly related to climate change."
Schneider-Mayerson said the new test isn't meant to be comprehensive, though his team has been at work on a much larger study, due out in April, applying the Climate Reality Check to 250 of the most popular feature films of the past decade.
"It's not going to be able to catch all of the different nuances of representing an issue as complicated as climate change," Schneider-Mayerson said. "But we're hoping that it's a good start and that it's something that people can apply."
The films that passed
Of the 13 Oscar-nominated movies that were set on Earth in the present or the future, only two besides Barbie passed the Climate Reality Check: the latest Tom Cruise action epic Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One ("It's going to be a ballistic war over a rapidly shrinking ecosystem. It's going to be a war for the last of our dwindling energy, drinkable water, breathable air," warns CIA director Eugene Kittridge, played by Henry Czerny); and the biopic Nyad, about extreme athlete Diane Nyad's attempts to swim from Cuba to Florida in dangerous conditions caused by rising sea temperatures ("So the UMiami folks think that the box jellyfish came up off the shallow reef when we left Cuba. Global warming," says Nyad's coach Bonnie Stoll, played by Jodi Foster.)
Nyad, Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One and Barbie aced the test because of lines of dialogue. But the Climate Reality Check also considers visual representations of the topic; for example a character can be seen silently reacting to an article in the media with a climate change-related headline.
The fact that only three movies passed the test doesn't seem like many. Yet Good Energy's Joyner noted this amounts to almost a quarter of the 13 films eligible to be tested, and said she is pleased with the Climate Reality Check's baseline results.
"It just gives us another example of how these stories can be very commercially successful," Joyner said, adding she hopes to see 50% of contemporary movies and TV shows acknowledging climate change by 2027.
The full Climate Check Reality report can be downloaded here.
This story was produced for air by Isabella Gomez Sarmiento, and edited by Jennifer Vanasco for digital and air.
veryGood! (435)
Related
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- US House control teeters on the unlikely battleground of heavily Democratic California
- Condemned inmate Richard Moore wants someone other than South Carolina’s governor to decide clemency
- Dr. Dre sued by former marriage counselor for harassment, homophobic threats: Reports
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Why Florence Pugh, Andrew Garfield say filming 'We Live in Time' was 'healing'
- Security guard gets no additional jail time in man’s Detroit-area mall death
- ESPN signs former NFL MVP Cam Newton, to appear as regular on 'First Take'
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Hurricane Threat Poised to Keep Rising, Experts Warn
Ranking
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- The 2025 Critics Choice Awards Is Coming to E!: All the Details
- 10 players to buy low and sell high: Fantasy football Week 6
- 50 pounds of 'improvised' explosives found at 'bomb-making laboratory' inside Philadelphia home, DA says
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Security guard gets no additional jail time in man’s Detroit-area mall death
- Video shows Florida man jogging through wind and rain as Hurricane Milton washes ashore
- EPA Settles Some Alabama Coal Ash Violations, but Larger Questions Linger
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Police seize $500,000 of fentanyl concealed in carne asada beef at California traffic stop
Travis Kelce's Ex Kayla Nicole Reacts to Hate She’s Received Amid His Romance With Taylor Swift
Ye sued by former employee who was asked to investigate Kim Kardashian, 'tail' Bianca Censori
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Teen dies suddenly after half marathon in Missouri; family 'overwhelmed' by community's support
Chicago man charged with assaulting two officers during protests of Netanyahu address to Congress
Martha Stewart Reveals She Cheated on Ex-Husband Andy Stewart in the Most Jaw-Dropping Way