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Hollywood has faced no shortage of existential threats lately, but none more daunting than the climate crisis that threatens us all. Thankfully, the industry is in a unique position to do something about it. In its third annual Sustainability issue, THR assesses studios’ efforts to incorporate green practices — and climate-focused storylines — into their productions to help the world understand the stakes.

Edited by Julian Sancton and Kimberly Nordyke • designed by Kelsey Stefanson
Cover illustration by Peter Greenwood • Animation by Folio Lab

collage of scenes from The Affair, Abbott Elementary, Snowpiercer, Girls on the Bus, and Wild

About Town

After spending more than half her life championing environmental causes, Woodley now asks herself, “Am I just going to be adding to the noise?” With a new PBS docuseries on sustainable seafood, the Big Little Lies star finds a subject worth taking the dive.

From a private island with a coral restoration program in the Maldives to a five-star forested retreat in the Dolomites, here are a few destinations for the economically advantaged eco-conscious.

The family duo is collaborating on engaging videos to bring the actor’s longtime activism to a new generation.

Craving cashew cheese and buffalo cauliflower? A guide to 10 of the industry’s favorite meatless meeting places.

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hands holding a film clapboard slate just above water with the Hollywood hills in the background

"I would love to see more stories … to show how small we are in comparison to the nature around us," says the Oscar nominee and director of Twisters, who grew up in Oklahoma's tornado belt.

Big Picture Ranch founders Rebecca and Josh Tickell — who directed the hit doc Common Ground  — moved from L.A. to Ventura County in 2012 to be closer to nature and to pursue the latest subject for their climate-centric films: soil.

Rebecca and Josh Tickell and their two children

Through the new Clinton Foundation initiative Too Small to Fail, the former secretary of state is trying to help people make the connections between children’s mental and physical health and the impact of climate change.

By rolling up to red carpets in the odd-looking hybrid, early adopters like Leo, Meryl and Arnold paved the way for the electric car. That was no accident: “My mission was, we can make the car so cool that if you didn't buy it, you didn't care about the environment.”

Reviews

collage of scenes from movies Afire, Evil Does Not Exist, Banel and Adama, and How to Blow Up a Pipeline

From Ryusuke Hamaguchi's Evil Does Not Exist to Ramata-Toulaye Sy's Banel & Adama, indie films are representing climate change as a fraught ongoing negotiation between humans and the environment instead of a single catastrophic event.

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