Please read the description!
What really happened with the cover-up of the
Deep Water Horizon incident in the
Gulf of Mexico.
Josh and
Rebecca Tickell interviewed by LivingECO.com's Ken
Spector about their new documentary about the BP Oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.
The film is called THE
BIG FIX, and documents how irresponsibility and lack of accountability led to one of the worst environmental disasters ever. According to scientists, the oil is STILL leaking into the ocean, and according to
Josh Tickell, BP continues to pour corexit chemical to hide this massive disaster.
Rebecca Tickell has a permanent skin condition called "tar smarting", most likely as a result of being exposed to a mixture of corexit and petroleum during the filming of this documentary. She can no longer go into the sun without being covered. Rebecca mentions in the interview that her toxicologist told her that women living in the region are having increasing miscarriages and malformed babies.
The Documentary:
Josh Tickell (
Fuel) and his wife and co-director Rebecca Tickell is the latest doom-and-gloom environmental documentary although this one takes alarming leaps from a single environmental catastrophe into fantastic realms of worldwide conspiracies, corporate malfeasance and political corruption. Which is not to say the filmmakers got anything wrong.
Anyone with an open mind and some attention paid to events of the past few years will have little trouble seeing that the fix was in when the
Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig blew up in the Gulf of Mexico last year -- and this fix will still be in when the next catastrophe happens.
The problems with
The Big Fix though are threefold: One, judging by the poor attendance of journalists and film critics at the film's Palais press screening, few people other than fellow activists are seeing to these doom-and-gloom movies anymore. Two, little here is really new as much of the Tickells' findings have been reported elsewhere, even by some of those they interview, especially
Jeff Goodell, who spent months in the Gulf for his well-researched
Rolling Stone article.
Finally, the Tickells describe a "fix" is so vast and powerful, the film can only throws its hands up over any realistic solution other than to install solar panels to heat up your toxic household water.
Then again, the Tickells may have all this right.
The movie begins with history lessons about BP,
Iranian oil,
Louisiana politics and the search for new sources of fossil fuel outside the
Middle East.
Following the explosion and subsequent disastrous leak, the filmmakers head for
Louisiana to learn more.
BP, which was unable to stop the flow of crude oil for months, infamously was able to stop much of the flow of information about what the British-based company was doing to solve the leak. So first the Tickells bring along a couple of celebrities, activist-actors
Peter Fonda and
Amy Smart, in the hope that this will help loosen tongues. Local fishermen and other locales do chat a bit but none of the crew can penetrate those areas and beaches now suddenly "off-limits."
So covert activities, with appropriate musical accompaniment, are employed which result in scary footage of dead fish and thoroughly misguided nighttime spraying of the disbursement chemical Corexit, which makes the health risks for fish and humans all the worse. Or at least that's the opinion of the scientists consulted.
This leads to lessons in science and medicine, then further lessons in corporate financing of political campaigns, lobbyists, deregulation and the
U.S. banking system. You begin to wonder if you can get university credits for seeing this film.
The upshot of all these lessons is a bleak picture of a world virtually colonized by
Big Oil, which in turn is funded by
Wall Street with the acquiescence of both the
White House and
Congress.
O.K., that's a lot to swallow and perhaps the movie crams in too many subjects, heroes and villains for one 112-minute movie.
Interestingly, all the talking heads, on-screen charts and flow of information aren't as poignant or damning as the serious health issues Rebecca Tickell now suffers as a result of her exposure to Gulf air and water for only a limited time. This brings home the real consequences of BP's inadequate, tardy and wrong-headed response to the tragedy.
The film ends on a
Howard Beale note where it admonishes us all to open up our windows and scream out "We Have Had It!" Judging from the fiercely entrenched and pitiless power structure the movie portrays, somehow those words don't sound like they would have much effect.
Source:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/big-fix-cannes-2011-review-189062
Watch too:
Gulf Oil Spill: BP Execs
Escape Punishment as
Disaster Continues To
Impact Sea life. 1 of 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToyH_A4N67A
(4/23/12)
Source:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=il5GYFEDJfk&feature;=email
Original upload by livingeco on 18 nov
2011
- published: 18 Dec 2011
- views: 2609