The PM Who Took On Dupont

Green Dominion

A political epic about soil, power, and the fight for the future.

Logline

When idealistic Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launches a radical hemp revolution across the Canadian Prairies, he ignites a war against a shadowy petrochemical dynasty modeled after the DuPont family empire — risking his career, his family legacy, and the future of the planet itself.


Genre

Political Thriller / Eco-Drama / Prairie Epic


Tone

A blend of There Will Be Blood, The Big Short, and Interstellar, with sweeping prairie cinematography and tense backroom political warfare.


ACT I — THE DYING WINTER

Canada is trapped in economic stagnation. Farmers across Canada are drowning in debt. Oil prices crash. Wildfires consume forests in British Columbia while floods devastate the Prairies.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faces collapsing approval ratings and growing unrest. Critics call him a celebrity politician disconnected from ordinary Canadians.

During a diplomatic summit in rural Saskatchewan, Trudeau meets an aging Ukrainian-Canadian farmer named Elias Kovach, who shows him something extraordinary: experimental industrial hemp fields capable of restoring depleted soil, capturing massive amounts of carbon, producing biodegradable plastics, and revitalizing rural economies.

Elias tells Trudeau:

“Oil made the twentieth century. Hemp could save the twenty-first.”

Trudeau becomes obsessed.

He learns that hemp was historically suppressed by powerful chemical conglomerates whose fortunes depended on petroleum plastics, synthetic fibers, and paper monopolies.

At the center of this web stands the fictional Beaumont-DuPont Corporation — descendants of old industrial dynasties who quietly influence banks, media, and politicians across North America.


ACT II — THE PRAIRIE REVOLUTION

Against the advice of nearly everyone in Ottawa, Trudeau unveils “The Green Dominion Initiative”:

  • Massive hemp subsidies for Prairie farmers
  • Carbon-negative building programs using hempcrete
  • Bioplastic manufacturing plants in Manitoba and Alberta
  • Indigenous-led hemp cooperatives
  • Reforestation partnerships powered by hemp-based soil recovery

At first, Canada laughs.

Then the boom begins.

Abandoned small towns come alive. Young people return to farming communities. Railways reopen. Hemp batteries and textiles become major exports to Europe and Asia.

Drone shots sweep across endless glowing green prairie fields stretching to the horizon like oceans.

But the Beaumont-DuPont empire strikes back.

A sophisticated disinformation campaign floods social media:

  • “Hemp destroys traditional values.”
  • “Trudeau wants communist farming.”
  • “Canada is becoming a drug state.”

Corporate lobbyists pressure Washington to sanction Canadian exports. News pundits mock Trudeau nightly.

Then mysterious fires destroy several hemp processing facilities.

One whistleblower investigating Beaumont-DuPont dies in what authorities call a “vehicle accident.”

Trudeau realizes he is not fighting ordinary political opposition — he is fighting an entrenched industrial order terrified of losing control.


ACT III — THE CARBON WAR

Global temperatures surge.

Massive climate disasters hit:

  • Heat domes in India
  • Food shortages across Europe
  • Mega-hurricanes devastating the American south

Suddenly, Canada’s hemp infrastructure becomes geopolitically vital.

Scientists discover Canadian hemp farms are removing carbon from the atmosphere at unprecedented scale while restoring poisoned farmland.

Countries begin copying Canada’s model.

The Beaumont-DuPont corporation launches its final attack: a secret attempt to crash Canada’s banking system and trigger a constitutional crisis that would force Trudeau from office.

During a televised emergency address from Parliament Hill, Trudeau delivers the defining speech of his life:

“The old world told us prosperity required poisoning the Earth.
They told us greed was realism.
They told farmers to disappear and communities to die.
But this land remembers another way.”

Farmers blockade highways in support of the hemp initiative.

Indigenous leaders, truckers, students, scientists, and immigrants unite across political divides.

For the first time in decades, Canada feels united.


CLIMAX

In a cinematic finale during a thunderstorm over the Prairies, leaked documents expose Beaumont-DuPont’s decades-long suppression of hemp technologies and manipulation of environmental policy.

Global markets collapse around fossil-fuel plastics.

Canada emerges as the center of a new green industrial revolution.

Trudeau stands alone in a vast hemp field at sunrise.

The wind moves through the plants like waves across an emerald ocean.

A young child asks him:

“Do you think we saved the world?”

Trudeau looks across the endless fields.

“No.
I think we finally stopped destroying it.”

Fade out.


Themes

  • Industrial power vs democracy
  • Ecological restoration
  • Prairie identity and Canadian unity
  • Corporate monopolies and propaganda
  • The rediscovery of forgotten agriculture
  • Hope through collective action

Visual Style

  • Golden prairie sunsets and aerial cinematography
  • Stark contrast between sterile corporate towers and living green landscapes
  • Natural soundscapes: wind, trains, rain, harvesters
  • Futuristic eco-industrial architecture blending with rural Canada

Tagline

“The future grows from the ground up.”

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