I saw the movie in Austin. My assessment was -- OMG! The movie was outstanding.
I went to see it at the Alamo Drafthouse for its third and last screening during the SXSW film festival and the House Manager said that if the third screening has lots of people show up that there is definitely a big "buzz" going on at the festival about the movie. Guess what? It was a completely full house -- not a single empty seat -- at 4:30 on a Thursday aftenoon. The SXSW emcee who introduced the film (not related to the production) said, "This is the film to see. It's incredibly important."
The Producers say that documentary premiers are lucky to get 10% of the audience to stay behind for Q&A following a screening and at the Alamo about 60% of the audience stayed. People didn't want to leave the theatre. They asked all sorts of questions about oil, alternatives, when the movie was going to be available and so on. And the audience repeatedly thanked the producers for doing the film. The SXSW coordinator had to stop the questioning and tell everyone to leave!
OK, so here's the scoop on the content -- its very credible, very comprehensive. Uses both file newsreel footage and extensive interviews, the film begins with the beginning history of the oil industry and visits some countries and places that have already peaked and shows the consequences to those places, then the key relationship between oil and war dating back to WWII, followed by an excellent explanation of Hubbert's Peak, the true reliability of reported global reserves (in a stunning statement by former OPEC Sect'y Gen'l Chalabi), the true cost of oil and why that's a problem (it's too cheap), and then what the future potentially holds -- including discussions of multiple alternative energy options and whether or not they are the silver bullet to save us. Colin Campbell, Simmons, Savinar, David Goodstein, Roscoe Bartlett, oil executives, all conservative heavy hitters basically stating a consistent message about when peak will hit and whether or not we have time to avoid significant global consequences. This movie is, without a doubt, a call to immediate action. And the very last sentence uttered in the film is intensely sobering (but I won't spoil it by telling you what it is.)
People leave the theatre stunned -- no other way to describe it. I personally think this is the movie for both people new to the peak oil theory and people who think they know a little about it. It should also play at every PTA and Chamber of Commerce meeting across the country. I can't wait for it to become available in the mainstream.
There is also a critics review posted at:
http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/review/ ... print.html
When it comes out -- go see it -- and bring your friends and your family, and their friends. Nobody will have to prompt a discussion amongst your companion viewers after watching the film. It'll just happen.