Promised Land (FILM REVIEW)
Promised Land
Film Review by Kam Williams
Gas Company Downplays Downside of Fracking in Timely Eco-Drama
In 2011, a disturbing documentary called Gasland was nominated for an
Academy Award in the Best Documentary category. That eye-opening expose’
chronicled how energy companies had duped landowners in Pennsylvania
and Colorado into signing over the drilling rights on their property
while downplaying the ecological risks.
For hydraulic
fracturing, AKA fracking, the process employed to mine natural gas, has
contaminated many a community’s environment, thereby rendering homes
virtually uninhabitable. In that movie, victims demonstrated with a
match how their tap water had become flammable, and how their pets had
inexplicably turned sickly and started shedding fur in patches.
Ostensibly inspired by Gasland, the Biblically-titled Promised Land is a
cautionary tale tackling the same theme. This modern morality play
reunites director Gus Van Sant with Matt Damon for their fourth
collaboration which began back in 1997 with Good Will Hunting. The pair
also worked together on Finding Forrester in 2000 and on Gerry a couple
of years later.
Here, Damon stars as Steve Butler, a
farm boy-turned-itinerant corporate pitchman employed by a gas
conglomerate to fast-talk country folks into turning over their drilling
rights. He and his partner’s (Frances McDormand) latest assignment
takes them to McKinley, a cash-strapped, if otherwise idyllic, rural
community that stands to be polluted if tricked into signing on the
dotted line.
Steve has a down-home way of insinuating
himself with the locals which even turns the head of a pretty schoolmarm
(Rosemarie DeWitt). Fortunately, a couple of gadflies in the ointment
emerge in a skeptical science teacher (Hal Holbrook) and an outside
agitator (John Krasinski) who urge everybody not to be blinded by dollar
signs, but to do a little research into the potential fallout from
fracking.
A transparent message movie which might
deserve to be forgiven for moralizing and politicizing, given the
urgency of the underlying environmental issue.
Very Good (3 Stars)
Rated R for profanity.
Running time: 106 minutes
Distributor: Focus Features
To see a trailer for Promised Land, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBqPv6xO6es
No comments:
Post a Comment