Documentary filmmaker, Chris Paine, has followed up his biting 2006 documentary Who Killed the Electric Car? with a sequel, aptly titled Revenge of the Electric Car.
The sequel takes a behind-the-scenes look at the race to develop the next generation of electric vehicles.
His controversial first film on the subject focused on GM's 1996 EV1 electric vehicle - 1117 of the landmark cars were produced - and the conspiracy theories surrounding the project's cancellation in 1999.
Documentary filmmaker, Chris Paine, has followed up his biting 2006 documentary Who Killed the Electric Car? with a sequel, aptly titled Revenge of the Electric Car.
The sequel takes a behind-the-scenes look at the race to develop the next generation of electric vehicles.
His controversial first film on the subject focused on GM's 1996 EV1 electric vehicle - 1117 of the landmark cars were produced - and the conspiracy theories surrounding the project's cancellation in 1999.
Six years later, electric vehicles are in vogue. Many carmakers - including Mitsubishi, Nissan, Renault, GM and Tesla - have an EV on the market, and more still are readying their own production EVs.
TMR has teamed up with the film's Australian distributor Heritage HM to give away three copies of Revenge of the Electric Car.
To enter the draw, describe in 150 words or less, your vision for the future of electric cars in Australia.
The best three entries, as judged by the TMR team, will win the film on DVD.
Show more