Page added on January 6, 2013
Matt Damon’s new fictional movie about natural gas development in a rural township was being lambasted by the natural gas industry even before it premiered. And yet, the film shows no tanker trucks laden with toxic fracking fluid. It depicts no roughnecks descending on a small town unprepared for the influx of new workers. It features no ghastly wastewater ponds and not even one drilling pad or derrick. In fact, drilling has yet to begin in the fictional township of McKinley.
As a result there are no wheezing people made sick from fumes associated with the drilling. There are no flaming water taps–first seen by many in the documentary Gasland, a film which displays devastation which it attributes to hydraulic fracturing and other processes associated with natural gas drilling in America’s deep shale deposits. In Promised Land there is not even one dead farm animal unless you count the ones pictured on a yard sign distributed by an environmental activist who opposes the drilling.
So why is the natural gas industry having such a hissy fit over the film? I think the answer lies in its premise: That the people of this small community ought to have a public discussion about whether they want the drilling–one informed by all the facts, not just the ones the natural gas drillers want them to hear–and that the community should then take a vote. God knows that in corporate America, democratic governance should never, ever take precedence over corporate imperatives. Could things be any more infuriating than that?
Well, yes they can. We are treated to acts of perfidy on the part of Steve Butler (played by Damon) who believes that everyone has a price, one that his company is only too willing to pay. Butler is a landman for a large drilling company though he is never referred to using this industry term. His job is to lease the mineral rights from landowners in the township quickly and cheaply. But a well-informed high school teacher (played by Hal Holbrook) challenges Butler at a meeting of townsfolk that was designed to close the deal. After that things get complicated. Butler and his partner, Sue Thomason (played by Frances McDormand), must abandon the playbook that has worked so well for them in the past and improvise.
As resistance grows, Butler and Thomason hurry to close as many deals as they can. Increasingly, people turn them down. Here is where Butler’s frustration leaks out as he loses his cool in front of people he ought to be trying to gently persuade. Whether such flashes of temper accurately portray the behavior of landmen, I have my doubts. But these fits are illustrative of the arrogant attitude of the industry in general. How dare anyone question what the industry is doing to make America energy independent! How dare people who have so little money and so little prospect of getting any turn down the chance to become wealthy! How dare these little people from rural nowhere resist a big, powerful company that is only trying to help them, their communities, and the country at the same time!
Butler is likeable, even sweet when we first meet him. But later he seems to pout on behalf of the entire natural gas industry when he runs into inconvenient questions about his story and his motives. It’s possible that people in the industry who watch the film will mistake his arrogance for righteous indignation, a pose which industry leaders have spent time perfecting so as to portray themselves as victims.
In his initial townhall-style meeting with community members, Butler challenges the townspeople saying that if they are against natural gas, then they are for more oil and coal consumption, both dirtier alternatives. He adds that the only other option is to reduce our energy use, and, of course, nobody wants to consider that. This is the one positively revolutionary thought slipped into the film. For it would be utterly revolutionary to proceed on the premise that we could remake our society into one that ultimately does not depend on fossil fuels for energy. The first crucial step would be to reduce our energy consumption dramatically. And, we actually know how to do this, both by adjusting our behavior and through existing technology. Optimists love to tout technology when talking about increasing the energy supply. They seem to forget that that same technological prowess can and should be focused on reducing our energy consumption. But then no oil and gas company can make a profit on that.
Will you be entertained by Promised Land? I was and I think an open-minded moviegoer will have much to enjoy in this film. The acting is excellent, the characters are well-developed, and the plot has enough twists to keep the audience interested. The script is a little heavy-handed in places. But keep in mind that this film is as much about an issue as it is about the characters. If the characters never talked about or defined the issue as carefully as they do, then Promised Land might still be a good film. But it would not be an issue-oriented film which is part of its appeal.
The reaction from the natural gas industry has been as predictable as it has been puzzling. By launching an all-out smear campaign, they are only helping to make Promised Land a must-see movie for 2013. Everyone will want to know what all the fuss is about, even those who have no strong feelings one way or another about fracking and natural gas. Those who do see the movie will certainly have more questions about the motives and veracity of the industry than before.
But the natural gas industry continues to be extraordinarily foolish in its handling of the media and completely idiotic in its reaction to environmental and health concerns. Instead of ignoring critics in the media, the industry has vilified them, thereby making them even more visible to the public. Instead of vowing to address environmental and health concerns with some kind of credible industry-wide standards, the industry has dismissed those concerns as imaginary, making the public all the more distrustful.
With that kind of track record, the producers of Promised Land should be thanking the natural gas industry for all the free publicity and for elevating what might otherwise have been an obscure, low-budget film into a contender for socially conscious movie-of-the-year–one that will now be labeled mandatory viewing for all right-minded people.
6 Comments on "Why the natural gas industry hates the movie ‘Promised Land’ so much"
Arthur on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 2:18 pm
I am certainly going to see the movie, despite the troubling fact that it is financed by the UAE:
http://deepresource.wordpress.com/2013/01/03/promised-land/
ken nohe on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 2:34 pm
Matt Damon has a knack for making interesting movies on difficult subjects. Too bad that they make so little waves. Maybe that’s because in real life behind the big villains, hides the smaller ones: all of us, using resources as if there was not tomorrow and never pausing to reflect on the many compromised needed to enjoy modern living. But why should we do that, the “others” don’t!
BillT on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 2:45 pm
Truth is the enemy of the Empire that was called the Western Countries. And we are all part of those lies as we even lie to ourselves. But soon, the lie will be too obvious to ignore. When it hits us between the eyes with the sudden end of all we knew and love and the beginning of a world much different in ways ways we want to pretend will never come.
John Baldwin on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 4:00 pm
It makes sense for Middle Eastern businesses to make anti shale gas films. They don’t like the US heading towards gas and oil self sufficiency
I don’t think there is anything to stop this happening though.
It’s obviously a good idea and there do not seem to be any environmental issues at all in reality (as opposed to in movies like Gasland)
SilentRunning on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 4:29 pm
John Baldwin (probably a paid shill for the fracking industry) excreted:
“It’s obviously a good idea and there do not seem to be any environmental issues at all in reality (as opposed to in movies like Gasland)”
So, Mr. Baldwin – since there are no environmental issues at all – you would have no hesitation to live right next to a drill pad in say Dimock PA, and have your children drink the water that came out of your well?
Mikey on Sun, 6th Jan 2013 4:39 pm
I am sorry, Mr. Baldwin, the US is NOT heading for energy self sufficiency. You are reading too much into self absorbed and self serving hype by the oil and gas industry over tight oil resources.
The industry cannot support more than the current rig count; the tight oil industry cannot drill more than 5000 new wells every year in the US (it is physically not possible and literally 35% of those new wells each and every year are required to replace tight oil production that has been lost the previous year from decline.
I believe that current import rates are between 9 and 10 million barrels per day. The notion that the tight oil industry can come up with that over the next 5-8 years, from production that declines at the rate of 75% the first three years, is ludicrous.
If the tight oil industry were to cease drilling right now, and it might if oil prices fall below 65 dollars a barrel, every tight oil shale well drilled in America would in the next 5 years become a stripper well, making less than 10 barrels per day.
Please do not buy into the tight oil hoopla. Its good for our country, but it is NOT A GAME CHANGER.