LONDON — Can it be that, like many baby boomers, King Charles III feels misunderstood?
That might sound like a strange question for a man with his own public relations team and easy access to any journalist in the realm. But 16 years after he wrote a book explaining his vision for saving the planet, the king has teamed up with Amazon Prime to make a film spelling out that philosophy.
The documentary delves into Charles' concept of ''harmony,'' the idea that restoring the balance between the human and natural worlds is crucial to combatting global warming and many other major problems facing humanity.
Along the way, the king also confronts his critics, who have lampooned him as a dilettante flitting aimlessly from one cause to another with no rhyme or reason. Charles believes that climate change, urban planning, sustainable agriculture, traditional crafts and fostering understanding between religions — causes to which he has devoted much of his adult life — are inter-related issues that must be dealt with to create more liveable communities.
''I think we need to follow harmony if we are going to ensure that this planet can support so many,'' he said in a trailer for the film. ''It's unlikely there's anywhere else.''
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To help explain these ideas, experts including Tony Juniper, the former head of Friends of the Earth in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and Emily Shuckburgh, a University of Cambridge climate scientist, appear with Charles in ''Finding Harmony: A King's Vision,'' available on Amazon from Feb. 6. The narrator is Kate Winslet.
The king wants people to recognize that humans are as much a part of the natural world as the birds and the trees, something that can be obscured as we rush to work in air-conditioned offices, then drive to the supermarket to buy food wrapped in plastic, Juniper told The Associated Press.