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Surviving Progress

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Canada · 2011
1h 26m
Director Mathieu Roy, Harold Crooks
Starring Stephen Hawking, David Suzuki, Jane Goodall
Genre Documentary

As pressure on the world’s resources accelerates and financial elites bankrupt nations, can our globally-entwined civilization escape a final, catastrophic progress trap? Stephen Hawking, Jane Goodall, Margaret Atwood, and others weigh in with their thoughts on whether the pitfalls of progress could destroy civilization instead of helping it.

Stream Surviving Progress

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

40

Time Out by

Like the myriad dangers threatening the earth, the film is simply too unwieldy, a sprawling mass of ideas that are dutifully checked off and then given only superficial explanations in lieu of insightful explorations.

70

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Progress does a remarkable job weaving together these and many other big ideas in a crisp, coherent, easy-to-take fashion that somehow never becomes an informational overload.

60

New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman

The cumulative power of so many great minds envisioning our potential self-destruction is undeniable. You may start planning your move off the grid before the movie even ends.

70

Village Voice by Ernest Hardy

The film trots out a who's who of great thinkers - Jane Goodall, Stephen Hawking, Margaret Atwood, assorted scientists and historians - who are riveting as they walk us through the question of whether we will or can survive progress. The anticapitalism prognosis is grim, and the hope offered is slim indeed.

50

The New York Times by Manohla Dargis

Like too many short documentaries, it can't do justice to its complex topic or finally to those of us watching. Because, while Surviving Progress puts forth a lot of general advice (stop the deforestation of the Amazon), it offers little in terms of real, practical, graspable solutions. People need hope; moviegoers do too.

60

NPR by Mark Jenkins

After nearly 90 minutes of human folly, though, Surviving Progress can't very well conclude with a tribute to mankind. So, to end on a hopeful note, the movie turns to a chimp.

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