Teslafy Me (2019) Poster

(2019)

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8/10
a jolting doc
ferguson-62 April 2020
Greetings again from the darkness. I've been trying to think of other examples of famous people known for one thing, when they deserve to be remembered for something else. Hedy Lamarr, considered by many to be the most beautiful actress ever (she played Delilah in SAMSON AND DELILAH), also invented a frequency hopping process used today in WIFI and military defense satellites. Marcel Marceau was a world famous mime who also helped save thousands of children during WWII. Johnny Weissmuller, who played Tarzan in many movies during the 1930's and 40's and created that iconic Tarzan yell, also was a 5 time Olympic Gold medal swimmer. Surely there are many others with similar stories, but maybe none more remarkable than Nikola Tesla ... known today as the make of a popular electric car, but his backstory is vital not only to history, but also to our current way of life.

Slovenian filmmaker Janja Glogovac delivers a very informative and highly polished documentary that takes us through Tesla's life (Serbian roots, raised in Croatia, moved to United States), including his dealings with such well known luminaries as Thomas Edison, George Westinghouse, and JP Morgan. Ms. Glogovac utilizes interviews with intellects, including Tesla's nephew William Terbo (a NASA engineer), and also many creative graphics, simulations, and animation.

Do you consider Steve Jobs a visionary? Would you be surprised to learn that Tesla imagined the cell phone more than a century ago? He dreamed of Utopia where energy was clean, rather than dependent on fossil fuels which would negatively impact climate and the earth's natural vibrations. Tesla detailed how his ideas came to him as flashes of light, and very specific. For you engineers and scientists, don't worry, some segments go fairly deep on his inventions and what they were meant to accomplish.

Tesla came to America in 1884, and after a brief stint with Edison (who put much into trying to discredit Tesla), was funded by George Westinghouse. Tesla's commitment to his electro-magnetic motor (alternating current) elevated his rivalry with Edison and the direct current option. When Tesla and Westinghouse "lit up" Chicago, the industrial revolution was ushered in. Tesla's hydro-electric power from Niagara Falls earned him the title of Father of Renewable Energy, and led to the Wardenclyffe Tower construction in 1901. It was an experimental wireless transmission tower that ended up with a similar fall from grace as Tesla himself.

Can the story of Nikola Tesla be told in an 80 minute documentary? Hardly. But the purpose seems to be reigniting an interest in a forgotten genius - a man whose work with radio, wireless, and electricity is still being utilized today. Elon Musk chose his brand name wisely, and we can't help but wonder if Tesla's ideas for clean energy had been supported rather than squashed, would we have avoided some of today's issues. Learning that J. Edgar Hoover had Tesla followed, and that Tesla died broke, leaves us wanting more information ... he deserves to be known as something more than the badge on an sleek electric vehicle.
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9/10
Stories not told are the biggest lies
nije-mala19 November 2020
First off, let me start with making it perfectly clear: as Tesla scholar and a fellow countryman, I am biased and of the solid opinion that Nikola Tesla deserves the place in history of science (and the world, for that matter) reserved only for the greatest - yet, and Ms. Glogovac is correct to start the movie with this - it took a fancy car to have people become interested in him... Every time you flick the light on in your living room, think of Nikola Tesla, every time you listen to your radio, think of Nikola Tesla, every time you ask yourself why are we not so much better off as humans and why is our planet so screwed up, think of Nikola Tesla, and the corporate greed that destroyed him and robbed him of his achievements.

Ms. Glogovac paints a picture of Nikola Tesla in, for my taste, too wide brush strokes, and is more interested in the sensationalism of the subject than the subject itself BUT if that'll help the truth emerge, and move Tesla closer to the recognition he truly deserves, so be it.

BTW, Nikola Tesla was born in Austro-Hungarian Empire's southern province (Croatia didn't exist at that time) in the family of the Serbian Orthodox priest.
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3/10
Fuzzy facts
tim-78321 May 2021
First, let me say, I'm a Tesla fan. He got the short shrift from history - until recently. A correction IS due. This film's enthusiasm for the man is over the top and relentless. A few minutes in I began to believe the sun would not be rising if not for Nikola Tesla. About halfway in I heard a statement that stopped me cold. The narrator said in 1883, "Tesla made Chicago the first city with electric lighting, launching the industrial revolution."

The second part of this statement could be a translation error. Maybe the author intended to say "electric/electrical revolution" as the industrial revolution began 150 years earlier. The first part, about Chicago becoming the first city with electric light, is just wrong. My knowledge of history is not perfect, so I did a search. Wabash (1880) and Cleveland (1879) are mentioned although neither used light bulbs.

Then there is this from a site called The History Rat, "By 1882, Thomas Edison began using DC (direct current) to power a street in New York. Electric street cars also began to appear around the country. But, in 1883, Nikola Tesla built his first transformer that turns AC (alternating current) from low voltage to high voltage..."

So, the statement about Chicago should have been read, "Chicago became the first city to be lit by incandescent bulbs, powered by an AC generator". Not the same thing as first city with electric lights.

I stopped watching "Teslafy Me" at that point. Who knows what other truths will be tossed aside in the filmmaker's enthusiasm for Tesla.

A documentary that plays so loose with history is of no value to anyone.
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1/10
Pseudoscience presentation.
edgar0101196025 July 2021
Since I studied and practiced electronics and chemistry for a profession and actively worked for many years in a lab, I am able to determine when claims are not based on real scientific facts. There are claims made by people that have no clue about the science. What you see are people talking about pseudoscience nonsense. Their profession often has no link with science even.

Don't watch this kind of nonsense. If you really want to see interesting scientific correct information and learn something, watch the series "How the Universe Works".
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