Gasland (2010)

Gasland
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Infrequent coarse language

Director: Josh Fox
Actor: Josh Fox

In September 2006, theatre director and part-time banjo player Josh Fox received an unexpected letter in the mail: a natural gas company offering him $100,000 for permission to explore his family's upstate New York property, in the lush Delaware River Basin area. Rather than join many of his neighbours in signing on the dotted line, Josh's curiosity saw him asking questions. He soon discovered that in the race for 'cleaner', greener & more efficient energy sources, the largest natural gas drilling boom in history is sweeping the globe, and in the US, the Halliburton-led drilling technology of hydraulic fracturing (or 'fracking') has unlocked a "Saudi Arabia of natural gas". So Josh picked up his camcorder, and set out on a journey across America's heartland. His personal concerns quickly uncover global ones, as the citizens of 'GasLand' testify to what's been happening around them: toxic streams, ruined aquifers, dying livestock, shocking illnesses and tap water that bursts into flames. It becomes evident that the multi-million dollar business of fracking has contaminated the water supply, the corporate giants are in cover-up mode, and the PR-spun government has not only turned a blind eye, it has regulated itself out of the picture…

DVD
Status: QuickPick
Run time: 104mins
Origin: UNITED STATES
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Play
Run Time: 104mins
File Size (Approx): 0.9 GB
It's only natural
by Simon Miraudo, 16/11/2010 12:04:00 PM

GasLand is a heroic film; a D.I.Y. documentary dedicated to unearthing the hidden dangers of the natural gas industry. The subject of the film is not what makes it heroic, but rather the journey undertaken by director Josh Fox, who describes himself as “an accidental detective”. Perhaps he is. He begins the film as an unassuming yet inquisitive American citizen, and ends it as a spokesperson against an impending environmental disaster. His transition is one of the most satisfying narrative arcs of any film in recent years – documentary or otherwise. He begins the picture as a laid-back dude, and ends it by asking a high-level representative of the Environmental Protecting Agency the hard questions, impassioned and inspired by the people he has met on his shocking journey. Whether his evolu...

GasLand is a heroic film; a D.I.Y. documentary dedicated to unearthing the hidden dangers of the natural gas industry. The subject of the film is not what makes it heroic, but rather the journey undertaken by director Josh Fox, who describes himself as “an accidental detective”. Perhaps he is. He begins the film as an unassuming yet inquisitive American citizen, and ends it as a spokesperson against an impending environmental disaster. His transition is one of the most satisfying narrative arcs of any film in recent years – documentary or otherwise. He begins the picture as a laid-back dude, and ends it by asking a high-level representative of the Environmental Protecting Agency the hard questions, impassioned and inspired by the people he has met on his shocking journey. Whether his evolution is genuine or totally fictionalised is not important. It – in no way – changes the facts revealed in the film. Instead, it allows viewers to invest in a story. In an age when most documentaries feel like school textbooks, it’s more than welcome.

We know little about Fox’s life prior to the events of the film; only that he was spawned by hippies and now resides on his family’s land in Pennsylvania. He spends his days strumming the banjo and admiring his acres, specifically the serene surroundings of the nearby stream. He’s contacted by a natural gas company who ask if he’d be willing to lease his land to them for $100,000. Partly tempted, partly curious, he wonders what the implications of natural gas drilling would be on his land, and on his life. After unsuccessfully trying to contact representatives in the industry, he packs up his camera and travels to the nearby town of Dimock – an early adopter of natural gas drilling. Fox befriends a number of residents, who share with him their numerous ailments, all of which they believe stem directly from their now-contaminated water supply. They blame their headaches and hair-loss on their tap water. Are they paranoid? Fox is certainly inclined to believe them when they show him a nifty trick. They can light their water on fire. Allow me to get the obvious line out of the way: something is definitely in the water.

The people of Dimock immediately trust Fox and charge him with the task of acting as their representative, even offering him jars of their water to have tested in a laboratory. He’s caught off guard at first – he claims he was simply carrying the camera around and pretending to be a documentarian to get some answers regarding his own land. Well, be it by chance or cosmic destination, Fox modestly accepts his mission and travels across America, finding case after case of water contamination caused – ironically – by the supposed “clean” energy industry.

I won’t spoil Fox’s discoveries in this review, nor will I simply list the deeply unsettling facts regarding the natural gas industry (although I will say that “fracking” is revealed to be more than simply a Battlestar Galactica curse-word). I couldn’t present you with the information as astutely as Fox does in his film. I will applaud the director on his picture’s construction. It’s a mélange of elements that shouldn’t work well together, but do. It’s a dreamy, Guy Maddin-esque docufantasia about a man coming to term with the realities of his home, and his country. It’s a revealing insight into the lives of the oft-ignored middle-Americans (who are intelligent, charming, and patriotic, even through their hurt). It’s a man-on-a-mission movie, and, in the final moments, it’s a message movie. It never panders to the audience; it only ends on a note that inspires us to take action. GasLand is shot in an amateurish fashion, reminding us that anyone could have made it – and in fact, any of us should have made it. It’s an inspiring, heartbreaking call-to-arms.

4.5/5

Check out Simon's other reviews here.

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Member Reviews (23)

23 Member Reviews
Barbara
says
Excellent. Compulsory viewing for all our politicians before it's too late!
Posted Wednesday, 17 April 2013 See my other reviews
KWAKA
says
Fantastic, eye opener.
Posted Sunday, 7 April 2013 See my other reviews
says
What an eye opener! Absolutely disgusting how the government departments cover up, don't acknowledge and just don't care about the people. Innocent people and animals being diseased and killed by money hungry a*holes. This is currently a problem in Australia too...Save the Kimberleys...Say NO to gas!!!!!
Posted Tuesday, 2 April 2013 See my other reviews
Lissa
says
So, so scary. Good on Josh Fox for making this documentary. I now know I DO NOT want fracting here in Australia.
Posted Wednesday, 27 March 2013 See my other reviews
Joff
says
This is what mining booms create. An out of control grab for wealth. Foreign ownership paying off governments. No regard to the surroundings. The planet doesn't have a hope if this sort of practice continues.
Posted Friday, 25 January 2013 See my other reviews
Sandy
says
It is absolutely amazing what the American power Companies can get away with & what their Goverment actually encourages from these Companies even when the health & livelihood of it's people are blatantly at risk. The denials of the environmantal & health effects are sickening (to me from watching - & literally to the thousands & thousand of Americans trapped in these places.) This is a BIG scale problem that is at ridiculous proportions & yet the denials of problems from the power Companies AND Government Departments is beyond understanding. I'm still shaking my head in disbelief & anger. A bit slow & repetitive at times. However worth watching.
Posted Thursday, 27 September 2012 See my other reviews
theemjway
says
Stuff that needs to be seen. Compelling.
Posted Tuesday, 19 June 2012 See my other reviews
Janette
says
Shocking story. Definitely, worth watching.
Posted Sunday, 26 February 2012 See my other reviews
Sam
says
Essential viewing if you want to stay current with what is going on in the world around you but even more so if they are planning coal seam gas extraction in your area. This is what you can expect on the surface .. the sights, smells, your livestock, your heath, your property values and most importantly your water. Very well presented I thought with an explanation of how fracking works, the succint history of gas in the US and interviews. This is what Australia can expect.
Posted Saturday, 4 February 2012 See my other reviews
Glen
says
The point of this documentary is the message rather than the production. Its value is in raising awareness of a terrible environmental and health disaster. Everyone should see it and lobby their governments to exercise great caution in approving natural gas drilling operations.
Posted Friday, 13 January 2012 See my other reviews
Sandy
says
An excellent example of uncontrolled corporate greed that seems so pervasive in the US.
Posted Tuesday, 13 December 2011 See my other reviews
Bajo
says
For a theatre director and part-time banjo player he didn't make a bad film.
Posted Wednesday, 7 December 2011 See my other reviews
JennyR
says
This is a movie every Australian should watch. If we don't stop Natural Gas mining we will end up like America with our water table compromised, our crops ruined, our animals sick and dying and our drinking water polluted with dangerous chemicals. Don't be decieved, it is beginning now and it must be stopped. After watching this I ordered a copy of Gaslands for myself so I can spread the word. This documentary is a must-see!
Posted Tuesday, 1 November 2011 See my other reviews
Katie
says
Sad situation but boring doco.
Posted Friday, 21 October 2011 See my other reviews
snakewoman
says
A must see. A horrifying picture of how governments and big business can ride roughshod over people is truly scary, not to mention the environmental catastrophies that coal seam extraction can cause.
Posted Tuesday, 27 September 2011 See my other reviews
kim k
says
not what i thought
Posted Monday, 12 September 2011 See my other reviews
Janine C
says
Everyone should watch this - it's happening here now. While the message is very serious I did appreciate the gentle way the filmaker, Josh Fox, presented it so ti wasn't fightening.
Posted Monday, 5 September 2011 See my other reviews
s james
says
a must see it will shock you we all deserve to know this
Posted Saturday, 23 July 2011 See my other reviews
Clare
says
I think everyone should see this film - especially in Australia where there are plans to use these same methods to extract gas deposits from shale
Posted Saturday, 23 July 2011 See my other reviews
Rossco
says
Real eye opener to see what the big conglomerates can do to the small person
Posted Saturday, 11 June 2011 See my other reviews
yeo44
says
a very interesting documentry, about what big gas companies are doing at will in America, drilling for gas where ever they please, regardless of farmers trying to make a living on their farms, they just move in and drill, this is upsetting the ecological balance of the ground and releasing gas into the atmosphere, a result of that making alot of people sick, and also in some instance killing wild;life and birds, it is very hard to make the governement of that county listen to the problems that are occuring,, not goood at all.
Posted Sunday, 15 May 2011 See my other reviews
Rita K.
says
This story is so shocking: it is hard to believe that people could be so avaricous and greedy and trash the environment so badly. What is it with Dick Cheney? Is he the devil incarnate? Not content with killing people in Iraq, he trashes his own country in the pursuit of profit for his company Halliburton who is all over the environmentally destructive practice of injecting a myriad of chemicals into the earth to release gas deposits and thereby contaminating the very stuff of life - the water we all need to survive. Natural gas is not a clean, green alternative energy supply - all that is involved in it's extraction pollutes the environment just as badly as any other fossil fuel. Don't be fooled by their spin. Watch this doco to get the facts and see the results of unregulated destruction of our earth. It is sickening. If they can get a chemist to concoct all of these chemicals to pollute the environment, why can't they find and fund one who can harness solar energy in a similar way? This is a well told, informative documentary made by brave people. brilliant.
Posted Wednesday, 4 May 2011 See my other reviews
gerd
says
There's an important and shocking story to be told about the drilling for natural gas. Unfortunately this film does a pathetic job of telling it. Any Australian current affairs show could do much better. The photography is terrible - shaky and out of focus - and the interviewing and commentary is amateurish. A wasted opportunity to properly expose an out-of-control and rapacious industry.
Posted Sunday, 17 April 2011 See my other reviews