As Los Angeles burns and climate deniers regain power, its message is clear: the time to act is not tomorrow or next year. It is now.
Read my full review @theatregb.com
theatregb.com/2025/01/17/r...
As Los Angeles burns and climate deniers regain power, its message is clear: the time to act is not tomorrow or next year. It is now.
Read my full review @theatregb.com
theatregb.com/2025/01/17/r...
The play critiques the hypocrisy of climate talks, from the carbon emissions of delegates to the entrenched power of oil companies. Did the Kyoto Protocol work? The cherry blossoms in Kyoto that fall earlier each year say otherwise.
The play critiques the hypocrisy of climate talks, from the carbon emissions of delegates to the entrenched power of oil companies. Did the Kyoto Protocol work? The cherry blossoms in Kyoto that fall earlier each year say otherwise.
The fast-paced, cinematic script weaves a globe-trotting thriller of backroom deals and power plays. This would make for brilliant screen material one day.
The fast-paced, cinematic script weaves a globe-trotting thriller of backroom deals and power plays. This would make for brilliant screen material one day.
Yet, like all great villains, Pearlman is disarmingly funny—adding an unsettling charisma to his cold-blooded calculations.
Yet, like all great villains, Pearlman is disarmingly funny—adding an unsettling charisma to his cold-blooded calculations.
A “grey man” in appearance, his character is chillingly manipulative—driving the climate talks into chaos while cloaked in plausible deniability.
A “grey man” in appearance, his character is chillingly manipulative—driving the climate talks into chaos while cloaked in plausible deniability.
Lanyards are handed out on arrival, blurring the line between spectator and participant. It’s as immersive as it is unsettling.
Lanyards are handed out on arrival, blurring the line between spectator and participant. It’s as immersive as it is unsettling.
Directed by Stephen Daldry & Justin Martin, it’s immersive, political, and fiercely timely—placing audiences right at the heart of the climate talks.
Directed by Stephen Daldry & Justin Martin, it’s immersive, political, and fiercely timely—placing audiences right at the heart of the climate talks.
In light of recent events, it plays less like a history lesson and more like a horror story. This is theatre at its most prescient.
In light of recent events, it plays less like a history lesson and more like a horror story. This is theatre at its most prescient.
A haunting parallel that underscores the urgency of this play. The stakes? Nothing less than the future of our species.
A haunting parallel that underscores the urgency of this play. The stakes? Nothing less than the future of our species.