Tomorrow's Power


Poster image Tomorrow's Power

"Tomorrow’s Power" is a feature length documentary that showcases three communities around the world and their responses to economic and environmental emergencies they are facing. In the war-torn, oil-rich Arauca province in Colombia, communities have been building a peace process from the bottom up. In Germany activists are pushing the country to fully divest from fossil-fuel extraction and complete its transition to renewable energy. In Gaza health practitioners are harnessing solar power to battle daily life-threatening energy blackouts in hospitals.



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Director

Amy Miller

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“You can cut all the flowers, but you can’t stop Spring from coming.” Filmmaker Amy Miller’s fourth documentary opens with this Pablo Neruda quote, which neatly encapsulates the objective of her documentary in defense of social justice.

In the film, the director brings us into the daily lives of men and women dedicated to fighting the environmental threats they face. Far from mere witnesses, these individuals have organized into peaceful communities to find and propose sustainable solutions. These touching characters are young people, hungry for hope, who believe in humanity’s future and the future of our coal-ravaged planet.

Three continents. Three struggles.

We see examples like the life-saving solar panels on hospitals in Gaza. In Germany, we see the government approaching residents to offer them the possibility of green villages (rather than the other way around). Hope is not dead! An environmental approach is necessarily a social one. Amy Miller helps us to see a tangible and beneficial link between social justice and the climate issues of today that we hope to make yesterday’s news.

 

 

 

Christian Mathieu Fournier
Filmmaker

 

 


  • FR- Le pouvoir de demain

    FR- Le pouvoir de demain


    Language: Français
  • EN- Le pouvoir de demain

    EN- Le pouvoir de demain


    Language: English
  • Année 2017
  • Pays Canada
  • Durée 77
  • Producteur Byron A. Martin, Wide Open Exposure, Zeugma films
  • Langue Arab, German, Spanish
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court Local activists from Gaza, Germany and Colombia, challenge fossil fuel dependence and power structures in their fight for social and climate justice.

“You can cut all the flowers, but you can’t stop Spring from coming.” Filmmaker Amy Miller’s fourth documentary opens with this Pablo Neruda quote, which neatly encapsulates the objective of her documentary in defense of social justice.

In the film, the director brings us into the daily lives of men and women dedicated to fighting the environmental threats they face. Far from mere witnesses, these individuals have organized into peaceful communities to find and propose sustainable solutions. These touching characters are young people, hungry for hope, who believe in humanity’s future and the future of our coal-ravaged planet.

Three continents. Three struggles.

We see examples like the life-saving solar panels on hospitals in Gaza. In Germany, we see the government approaching residents to offer them the possibility of green villages (rather than the other way around). Hope is not dead! An environmental approach is necessarily a social one. Amy Miller helps us to see a tangible and beneficial link between social justice and the climate issues of today that we hope to make yesterday’s news.

 

 

 

Christian Mathieu Fournier
Filmmaker

 

 


  • FR- Le pouvoir de demain

    FR- Le pouvoir de demain


    Language: Français
  • EN- Le pouvoir de demain

    EN- Le pouvoir de demain


    Language: English
  • Année 2017
  • Pays Canada
  • Durée 77
  • Producteur Byron A. Martin, Wide Open Exposure, Zeugma films
  • Langue Arab, German, Spanish
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court Local activists from Gaza, Germany and Colombia, challenge fossil fuel dependence and power structures in their fight for social and climate justice.

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