Welcome to DFW.com. Please e-mail us your feedback.

Logout | Your account

56°Dallas

High: 63°  Low: 47°

Complete Forecast

<
print story Print email this story to a friend E-Mail Add to My Yahoo!

tool name

close
tool goes here

Wednesday, Nov. 04, 2009

'Crude' taps into divisiveness of drilling in Ecuadoran rain forest

Crude

****

Not rated; 104 min.

You’re an Ecuadoran Indian. You live in the rain forest. The Amazon provides the water that you drink, that you use to live. And then a big oil company rumbles in, drills into the earth, and starts pumping. Waste and pollutants seep into the ground. Oil gets into the water table, is diverted into dumping beds, or is piped to the river -- for decades.

Nothing --not your village, your family, your health -- will be the same again.

In the powerful and powerfully upsetting documentary Crude, filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost, Metallica: Some Mind of Monster), tracks the devastating effects -- a high incidence of cancer, high infant-mortality rates, sick animals -- that, allege the 30,000 Ecuadoran plaintiffs in a class-action suit, have befallen them because of the environmental negligence of Chevron.

With a cast of characters that includes Pablo Fajardo, as a smiling yet deadly earnest Ecuadoran attorney; Steven Donziger as a Spanish-speaking New York lawyer; Joseph Kohn as the Philadelphia litigator whose firm is funding the case for the plaintiffs; celebrity eco-activists Trudie Styler and her husband, Sting; and lawyers and scientists for Chevron, Crude chronicles the complicated and contentious legal, political, and corporate maneuvering that has taken place in Ecuador and the United States. The alleged dumping went on between 1972 and 1990. The lawsuit was filed in 1992. A resolution is at least 10 years away, experts say.

This David and Goliath story has its good guys and its bad guys, certainly. And like any piece of advocacy journalism, it’s not hard to figure out who the filmmaker’s heroes are. What’s less clear, and more maddening, is how several generations of Ecuadorans have been left to live on toxic land, their health and livelihoods compromised, while lawyers file motions and counter-motions and blame is passed around.

Exclusive: Angelika Dallas

— Steven Rea Philadelphia Inquirer

Be the first to comment on this story click the 'Add Comment' Tab!


DFW.com is pleased to be able to offer its users the opportunity to make comments and hold conversations online. However, the interactive nature of the internet makes it impractical for our staff to monitor each and every posting.

Since DFW.com does not control user submitted statements, we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted on our website. In addition, we remind anyone interested in making an online comment that responsibility for statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not DFW.com.

If you find a comment offensive, clicking the exclamation icon will flag the comment for review by the administrators; we are counting on the good judgment of all our readers to help us.