This film starts with stating that we have 60 years of soil left, and that we have to do something. I agree! We do have to do something. The algae biochar power plant seems a neat and beautiful technology to be applied to this problem. And the parking lot farm too. I'd just wish they would have talked about how these systems work so to better educate the viewer abouth what's possible. Instead we're fed two hours of personal sob stories by all the participants. And all I'm left with is that there's something called biochar, and algae is involved somehow. And with the parking lot farm, what soil mixing is done, how does he produce his compost, how does he deal with pests, what fertilizer is used.. etc. We get none of that. I don't care that the girl scouts organization doesn't want to invest in non GMO cookies, at least not enough to have that make out like 20 min of the film. Soil health is such a vitally important subject, and people need to be educated on it. This documentary is a waste of time and doesn't help to that end.