What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire

2007 "A middle-class white guy comes to grips with Peak Oil, Climate Change, Mass Extinction, Population Overshoot and the demise of the American lifestyle."
7.6| 2h3m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 21 October 2007 Released
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Official Website: http://www.whatawaytogomovie.com/
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Tim Bennett, middle-class white guy, started waking up to the global environmental nightmare in the mid-1980s. But life was so busy with raising kids and pursuing the American dream that he never got around to acting on his concerns. Until now… Bennett journeys from complacency to consciousness in his feature-length documentary, What a Way To Go: Life at the End of Empire. He reviews his Midwestern roots, ruthlessly examines the stories he was raised with, and then details the grim realities humans now face: escalating climate change, resource shortages, degraded ecosystems, an exploding global population and teetering global economies.

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Documentary

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Timothy S. Bennett

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What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire Audience Reviews

Wordiezett So much average
GrimPrecise I'll tell you why so serious
UnowPriceless hyped garbage
Humaira Grant It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
s0ulf00d This film is tough to watch. It is information dense and the narrative is fast-paced throughout the two-hour length. Watching it by re-playing bits of it, pausing in-between to read about the people interviewed and the books they've written will take better part of an entire day. But it is that good. Even if you think you know about these issues inside out, you should still watch. I made the mistake of letting it sit on my computer for a long time. Even after starting to watch a couple of times, I lost interest after a few minutes as I was put off by the lack of pauses that allow you to assimilate what was just said and also because I did not find any new information in the first 20 min of it or so. It is only in my third attempt that I managed to watch it in full and realised that it goes much deeper than other films. The first 18-20 min is about the personal struggle of the film maker. The conflict that comes from trying to live an ordinary life with a back-of-the-mind awareness that at some level things are deeply wrong. It's the double life we all live, those of us who understand the severity and scale of these crises but do not know what to do about it. The next 40 min or so is about the crises, categorised here into peak oil, climate change, mass extinction and population overshoot. Then it goes deeper into the ancient origins of the problems, the part that was most revealing. It then explains how modern science and technology perpetrated the "fantasy of no limits", gave us a false sense of control, argued that technology is not neutral, and that technology fixes do not always work in the long run. There's much more. You'll have to watch it for yourself. A word of thanks to the film makers for making this documentary and making it available on YouTube.
MrMajestik This doc just supports and solidifies what I already have learned, observed, researched, pondered, read, and realized for the last 30 years... And sadly, no, Jesus is not coming to save us! The only thing that keeps me from laughing and stating the proverbial "I told you so," is the fact I have a 6 1/2 year old son (who I love much more than Jesus), he breaks my heart with his love and concern for the planet already, asking and reminding me to recycle... while I know that unchecked population growth and capitalism will destroy what once was a unique and beautiful planet, and likely leave him a unpleasant future. We have only ourselves to blame...
leycec Conceivably, WaWtG:LatEoE (or, "whatgulateoe") is the most important film of our time. As other reviewers comment, it is not necessarily the most well-crafted film. It isn't. The editing is flawed; the pacing, disjoint.What it is, however, is the most ruthlessly honest film ever put to cinematography. From the earnest poetically hushed script-writing and narrator delivery to the relentless, factual interviews with scientific luminaries, authors, and journalists, WaWtG:LatEoE weaves the sordid story of... collapse. From the weft of everyday intuition and despondency, it incrementally and with examined force unravels the mass predicaments of industrial civilization. In no order, these are:* Peak oil. Global oil production peaked at 74.87 mbpd (million barrels of oil per day) on July 11th, 2008 - our so-called "Peak Oil Day," in hindsight.* Climate change. (I don't believe we need to discuss this one...)* Biodiversity loss. Anthropogenic species extiction is roughly 10,000 times the background rate, at an estimated 100 species per day. By contrast, the sum number of distinct species on Earth is estimated at only 10,000,000 species. Do the math.* Human overpopulation. The human population is currently growing at 94,000,000 humans annually. Human population growth has obeyed an exponential curve for the past 13,000 years: the so-called "Holecene." Unfortunately for the human population, the Earth is a finite planet.* Economic depression. At the tail end of quarter one of 2010, gross sovereign debt of the United States of America is an estimated 87.3% of GDP. If you think this is a sustainable trajectory, I have a Nigerian banker who would like to speak with you.In sum, the prognosis is bleak. If the 20th century was the Age of Exuberance, the 21st century will, with all likelihood, be the Age of Consequences. And the unpaid debt on those consequences is coming due.Humbly yours, Cecil Curry [ http://raiazome.com ]
tonywebman I gave this movie 10 out of 10 not because it is a great documentary or because it is written so well or because of the editing, etc. but because IT CONTAINS THE MOST IMPORTANT INFORMATION THAT YOU MAY EVER FIND IN A DOCUMENTARY! This does not mean it is a pleasant experience. On the contrary, I don't think most people can handle what this move has to say. It is an unflinching look at the dominant culture currently in place on Earth and how we are on a collision course with the destiny of our own making.This movie is similar to "An Inconvenient Truth" in that it discusses climate change but it also talks about Peak Oil, Population Growth and Mass Extinction. Do you think that this is all bullsh*t? See the movie, read up on the people who were interviewed and what they have to say. Read Ismail by Daniel Quinn, read anything by Derrick Jensen. Make up your own mind, talk to people about what this movie has to say.This is the most important thing you can do with you time. Drop everything, find a copy of this movie and watch it now! No, I'm not associated with the film-maker. I just watched this film and it blew me away!