Few young people evoke such strong reactions as climate activist Greta Thunberg. In one camp there is hatred, in the other undisguised insurrection. That's why the new documentary about her is worth it.

We see Greta Thunberg sitting in a room where a man holds a treatise about flushing toilets with recycled water. We see her look annoyed. She drops the headphones with a translation of the saying and sighs: 'I don't understand why I was invited. Looks like they just want to be in the spotlight. If we could solve this with loose tea leaves instead of bags and eat vegetarian once a week, then it wouldn't be a crisis.”

This man is the President of the European Commission. The scene is from I am Greta, a documentary about the young climate icon that premiered this week. And her reaction is typical. Because Greta Thunberg (17) has already travelled from climate summit to climate summit. World leaders from the French President to the Pope have welcomed her with open arms. At its peak, 4 million people worldwide participated in her climate school strike in one day. But Thunberg's judgment on the results of her actions is unmerciful: 'We have lost another two years of idleness through politics, 'she recently wrote in the British newspaper The Guardian.





Greta Thunberg idolized and defied