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Champagne Wishes and Climate Change Dreams
A new documentary on Champagne explores its roots in France, but also how sparkling wines have flourished across the English Channel thanks to global warming.
A new documentary, “Sparkling: The Story of Champagne,” is a lush valentine to the French bubbly, with history, profiles of many of the producers, pithy quotes about the wine, its celebrity connections (notably Winston Churchill) and tidbits about Champagne in the United States. But perhaps more compelling is its coverage of English sparkling wines , a less well-known topic. Climate change has turned the south of England into sparkling wine country, something the French acknowledge onscreen, with admiration; some French producers now own vineyards in England. But whether France is ready to credit England with having discovered champagne before Dom Pérignon’s 17th-century epiphany, a controversy the film examines, or whether James Bond will forego his Bollinger for Hush Heath Estate, one of the English houses in the film, remains to be seen.
“Sparkling: The Story of Champagne,” 88 minutes, produced by Frank Mannion and Oxana Popkova, directed by Frank Mannion, in theaters, video on demand and streaming on Prime Video, iTunes and others starting Aug. 13.
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