Liberal media outlet Vox called the sequel to former Vice President Al Gore’s 2006 climate documentary a “train wreck” after the film’s producers had to re-edit it after the November election.

Sometimes watching the sequel to “An Inconvenient Truth” is like watching “a PBS special about Al Gore, in which he reminisces about the highs and lows of his political career,” Vox’s Alissa Wilkinson wrote Friday. The poor filmmaking, she noted, was likely a result of several re-edits done after President Donald Trump’s Election Day victory.

“(T)he movie was obviously hastily modified after Trump’s win in November, and the film grimly forces viewers to remember that Trump has always dismissed the idea of climate change wholesale,” she added.

Gore’s new climate flick — “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power” — contains heavy re-edits making viewers feel like they’re “getting dropped off a cliff, even though Gore exhorts us to not give in to despair.”

 The Nobel Prize winner not-so intriguing sequel also contains plenty of politically partisan scenes, such as when New York AG Eric Schneiderman met with Gore to discuss the months-long investigation into ExxonMobil’s climate research history.

He was an instrumental cog helping Schneiderman kick-start his probes, telling an audience at a press conference in March that the AG is going after companies “deceiving the American people, communicating in a fraudulent way, about the reality of the climate crisis and the dangers it poses.”

His film dropped at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah on Inauguration Day when the former reality TV star will be sworn into office, which makes the movie all that more “strange,” Wilkinson added.

Trump once suggested that climate change is a “hoax created by China” to disrupt the U.S. economy and harm American business. He has since moderated his tone, telling reporters earlier this month that he is “open-minded” on global warming.

Gore met with Trump in December to hash out their differences on climate change.

“Candidate Trump made a number of statements and wrote a bunch of tweets that caused concern, but he also has other statements that at least give rise to the possibility that he and his team will take a fresh look at the reality of what we’re facing here,” the former vice president turned climate change warrior said in an interview.

Follow Chris on Facebook and Twitter

This article originally appeared in The Daily Caller