Greta Thunberg said Friday that the weight of the alarm about climate change weighs as heavily on her or any child as the wall rises after its premiere at the Venice Film Festival. It was an amazing movie.
The Swedish teen allowed filmmaker Nathan
Grossman to follow him for a year when he met him alone in his home outside
Parliament in Stockholm after meeting him in 2018 on the first day of the
school strike. Was sitting
During this time, she became a
self-confessed "shy man" and went on to become a global icon.
The resulting film, "Greta", not
only reveals the inner story of the pain and danger in which Thunberg has
included a North Atlantic racing yacht, carrying brave death threats and hair
because of the climate. - But her love for dance and comedy to break her gift.
Thunberg told AFP that he hopes to see the
roof of this deep and often image, which reveals his extraordinary addition to
the "conspiracy theories" that I have for myself. Doesn't think and
someone else writes my speech?
"In the film, you can see that it's
not really the fact that I make the decision myself," Brazilian right-wing
president Jair Bolsonaro, told the sacked activist as "Brett".
- Leaving baked beans -
The documentary shows several scenes in
which she clashes with her actor father, Svante - whom she persuades to become
a wagon.
Speaking through Zoom during a break in
class at his high school in Stockholm, Thunberg said the film is real, someone
who "loves his dogs and routines" but because of the climate 'S life
has been turned upside down.
The film shows how she dances to relieve
the pressure in her pajamas as she drives Europe in trains and her father's
electric car, living with baked beans and pasta when she asks leaders to They
work to save the planet.
On another occasion, she expressed
frustration that her role's responsibility was "too much" to remind
the world of the current crisis, a fear that was repeated during her virtual
press conference in Venice on Friday.
"It's a responsibility. I don't want
to do that," he said.
Yet when right-wing critics dismissed it
as "mentally ill" in the film, Thunberg, who has Asperger's syndrome,
laughed and said, "Sometimes I think it can be good. If only everyone had
a little bit of Asberger's.
"I don't see the world in black and
white, just the climate crisis."
- 'I had children' -
Despite receiving protests from Thunberg
on demonstrations and on social media, she admits in the film "the kids
were mild to me" when I was younger. "I was never invited to parties
and I was let go."
The activist, now 17, said the documentary
dispelled the notion that she was an "angry naive child" who shouted
at world leaders sitting in the UN General Assembly. This is not the person I
belong to. "
In fact, he admitted that he drew a laugh
from journalists and Grossman that at one point he had "doubts about its
seriousness" as a filmmaker because he worked on his own.
"Why don't they send a good guy? Why
aren't they more professional?" She spoke in surprise.
The film shows how the outspoken student
stopped quietly engaging with a global celebrity in the first few months of
2018, and her frustration at the gulf between politicians' promises and their
actions.
"I think the most surprising thing
about Greta is that she's so funny."
"Sometimes I joke that she could have
been a comedian. She's as charming and funny as you might have seen at this
press conference."
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