Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Fission chaps
MARIA DUARTE applauds the ambition of a film that contributes an unpopular voice to the climate debate

Atomic Hope                                
Directed by Frankie Fenton

 


CAN nuclear energy be the answer to the climate crisis? That is the belief of the subjects at the centre of Irish filmmaker Frankie Fenton’s provocative new film who assert that it is one of the cleanest and safest technologies in the world.

Thirteen years in the making, Fenton’s observational documentary which he was director of photography as well as writing, directing and producing, follows a small group of pro-nuclear activists as they try to persuade law makers and the public of the virtues of atomic energy using scientific evidence.

“It’s the only technology that can lift all humans out of poverty, create world peace and protect the natural environment” insists Michael Shellenberger, the CEO of Environmental Progress, who also says that more people are killed in car accidents than by nuclear power.

The film follows this group of charismatic, passionate and articulate individuals, that includes scientists, academics and “mothers for nuclear”, as they protest, march and occupy a stand at Cop23 in 2017 in Bonn.

Not allowed a seat at the table they set up their own campaigning space outside the event — but it turns out to be a flop rather than the viral internet sensation they were hoping for.
They claim that studies have shown that eating a single banana gives you more radiation than living next to a nuclear power plant for a year, and that global demand for energy will double or even triple by the middle of this century.  

Although on the whole they seem to make a compelling argument (bananas notwithstanding) their assertions are not challenged during the film. Nuclear energy isn’t recognised for its own massive carbon footprint in terms of the huge costs of building new reactors and the toxic waste they produce, as well as the mining of the uranium and thorium needed to fuel them.

And — as the film shows — whenever nuclear energy is mentioned to the public the first thing that people associate with it are the Chernobyl and Fukushima disasters, so Atomic Hope will always be a hard sell.

But it remains a fascinating film which does not make judgements but leaves it up to the viewer, and hopes to be a springboard for more informed debate in our need to stop climate change.
 
Out in cinemas today.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
fotw
Film of the Week / 24 July 2025
24 July 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the intricate study of a high-performance and highly dysfuntional German family

fotw
Film of the week / 17 July 2025
17 July 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the ambitious portrait of an agricultural community confronted by the trauma of enclosure

apocalypse
Film of the week / 10 July 2025
10 July 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends a chilling examination of the influence of Evangelical Christianity over the far right in Brazil

shrouds
Film of the Week / 3 July 2025
3 July 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the creepy thrills of David Cronenburg’s provocative and macabre exploration of grief

Similar stories
(L) Conclave; (R) Your Monster
Cinema / 28 November 2024
28 November 2024
Papal tiffs, Reality TV torture, volleyball feminism and a monster in the closet; The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Conclave, The Contestant, Power Alley and Your Monster
(L) The wild Robot; (R) A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things
Cinema / 17 October 2024
17 October 2024
Serial killer dating; courtroom charm; synaesthetic inspiration and jungle book robotics - The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Woman of the Hour, The Crime is Mine, A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things and The Wild Robot
(L) Speak No Evil; (Centre) The Queen Of My Dreams; (R) My F
Cinema / 12 September 2024
12 September 2024
Iranian late-bloomers, holiday chums, the poison pen, and Pakistani lesbians: The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews My Favourite Cake, Speak No Evil, The Critic, and The Queen Of My Dreams
(L) Juliette Gariepy in Red Rooms; (R) Morfydd Clark in Star
Cinema / 5 September 2024
5 September 2024
Yorkshire chills, tangled in the dark web, pregnancy diaries and brackish juice: MARIA DUARTE reviews Starve Acre, Red Rooms, My First Film and Beetlejuice