September 15, 2022

Oliver Stone’s “Nuclear” premiered at Venice Film Festival

Oliver Stone’s award-winning[1] documentary titled “Nuclear: Time to Look Again” premiered at the Venice Film Festival on September 9, 2022.

The film has an important backstory. By 2019, Stone had become increasingly concerned about climate change and the apparent lack of progress in reducing the CO2 emissions that cause it. After hearing about and then reading Joshua Goldstein and Staffan Qvist’s “A Bright Future: How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow” he decided that nuclear energy was a tool with great promise. He chose to contribute his skill as a filmmaker and storyteller to the pronuclear effort.

He and Goldstein co-wrote the script for “Nuclear.” During the 2-year-long effort to film and edit the movie, Goldstein provided detailed critiques and challenges. In interviews conducted before or immediately after the film’s premier, Stone has described the process of getting it right as a “pain in the ass” but also as an imperative to ensure that the film is not dismissed based on minor technical errors. He chose the documentary format as most appropriate for a topic with a public discourse that has been overloaded with emotion and fear and lacking in rational exploration of the underlying facts.

IMDB provides the following plot summary:

As fossil fuels continue to cook the planet, the world is finally becoming forced to confront the influence of large oil companies and tactics that have enriched a small group of corporations and individuals for generations. Beneath our feet, Uranium atoms in the Earth's crust hold incredibly concentrated energy. Science unlocked this energy in the mid-20th century, first for bombs and then to power submarines, and the United States led the effort to generate electricity from this new source. Yet in the mid-20th century as societies began the transition to nuclear power and away from fossil fuels, a long-term PR campaign to scare the public began, funded in large part by oil interests. This campaign would sow fear about harmless low-level radiation and create confusion between nuclear weapons and nuclear power. With unprecedented access to the nuclear industry in France, Russia, and the United States, director Oliver Stone explores the possibility for the global community to overcome challenges like climate change and reach a brighter future through the power of nuclear energy.

In a series of appearances throughout the film, Nucleation Capital’s Rod Adams described the way that fossil fuel interests invested in a nuclear energy fear campaign to protect their markets and political power. He also talked about the inspiring features of densely concentrated fuel that produces little or no pollution and about the advances being made in making nuclear energy systems smaller, simpler and easier to produce.

Unlike so many Hollywood disaster and dystopia films, “Nuclear” contains a hopeful, “we can do this” message. It features a small selection of some of the many scientists, engineers and communicators working to develop or enable the kinds of advanced nuclear energy systems that are being added to the Nucleation Capital portfolio. The film’s stars include Jake DeWitt (Oklo), Caroline Cochran (Oklo), Shannon Bragg-Sitton (INL), Ashley Finan (NRIC), Isabelle Boemeke (Isodope), and Joshua Goldstein (Bright Future).

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Footnote

[1]  “Nuclear” won the CICT Award – UNESCO “Enrico Fulchignoni” and the Fondazione Mimmo Rotella Award at the Venice Film Festival

We will be planning events around film-screenings of #Nuclear in the coming weeks. If you are interested in attending a screening event, please sign up here and we will send you a notification.

August 6, 2022

Oliver Stone announces a new documentary film on Nuclear

With an August 3rd tweet, filmmaker Oliver Stone announced the premiere of his latest documentary, Nuclear: Time to Look Again, at the Venice Film Festival on September 9th. We are looking forward to its release. Along with the promotional image shown above, Stone attached a brief written statement which reads:

I've been working on this for almost two years with the enormous help of Joshua Goldstein, coauthor of "A Bright Future." By now, I'm sure you know that this is an argument in favor of nuclear energy as the realistic solution to the gulf we now face in the production of clean energy for our continuing existtence here on the planet Earth.  This is an energy that will not only save the planet but allow us to thrive upon it.  And although it's long regarded in popular culture as dangerous, it is, in fact, far safer than coal, oil, and gas.  The documentary, at 1-hour-45-minutes, gets into the details but it doesn't sink into all the petty arguments that the anti-nuclear crowd throws at it.  Renewables like wind and solar work to a limited degree, but by now, we should know they don't come close to fixing the problem alone — — which is why the fossil fuel companies support renewables.  Because they inevitably require large amounts of methane gas to ensure their reliability.

I believe this is the greatest story of our time.  We must use science and our brains to overcome this ultimate challenge given to us by nature.

We'll be making the film more and more available on domestic platforms as we get closer to its release.

We will be planning events around film-screenings of #Nuclear in the coming weeks. If you are interested in attending a screening event, please sign up here and we will send you a notification.

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