Bhopal (DVD REVIEW)
Bhopal:
A Prayer for Rain
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Period Piece Recounts Industrial Disaster Caused by
Union Carbide
On the night of December 2,
1984, a pesticide plant located in Bhopal,
India spewed tons
of toxic gas into the air as the result of a reaction of water with a chemical
called Methyl Isocyanate (MIC). By morning, over 10,000 dead bodies lay in the
streets of the city, while the manufacturer company responsible for the
disaster, Union Carbide (subsequently acquired by Dow Chemical), proceeded to
lawyer up.
In the end, the corporation
settled the mammoth wrongful death lawsuit for just $300 per corpse without taking
responsibility or publicly apologizing for the industrial accident. Instead,
the firm claimed it was a victim of sabotage on the part of a disgruntled
employee, an allegation which was ultimately never substantiated. Yet, despite
the existence of evidence that Union Carbide had ignored warning signs of an
impending calamity, the Indian government let it off with out any criminal
consequences.
Directed by Ravi Kumar, Bhopal:
A Prayer for Rain is a historical drama ostensibly inspired by the book “Bhopal: Lessons of a Gas
tragedy” by the New York Times reporter Sanjoy Hazarika. The picture stars
Martin Sheen as Warren Anderson, the sloganeering CEO in denial fond of spouting
company lines like “We set the highest safety standards in the industry” and “We
are Union Carbide, united in our efforts to build a better future for everyone.”
This
fictionalized account, which revisits the events leading up to the catastrophe,
revolves mostly around the efforts of a couple of investigative journalists
questioning Carbide’s commitment to safety, given the rumors swirling that the
plant was leaking a very dangerous chemical. Both Motwani (Kal Penn), a local,
and Eva Gascon (Mischa Barton), a writer for Paris Match, were stonewalled at
every turn whenever they confronted executives and managers about whether an
exposure to just one drop of MIC was lethal.
The picture inexorably
leads to the unfortunate meltdown which scarred an entire country while the conniving
culprits escaped unscathed. A sobering lesson about controlling the corporate
message in this age of double speak where symbolic gestures have replaced
sincerity, substance and any concern about viable solutions.
Excellent (3.5 stars)
Unrated
In
English and Hindi with subtitles
Running
time: 96 minutes
Distributor:
Revolver Entertainment
DVD
Extras: None
To
see a trailer for Bhopal,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw7dZiYzKBY
To
order a copy of Bhopal
on DVD, visit:
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