"The film is based on an article by David Barstow, David Rohde, and Stephanie Saul published in The New York Times and was adapted by Matthew Michael Carnahan and Matthew Sand."
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/26/us/26 ... d=all&_r=0"But drilling quickly adds risk. For all of the Horizon’s engineering wizardry, it was tangling with powerful and unpredictable geological foírces. And pushing rapidly into a highly pressurized, three-mile-deep reservoir of oil and gas can be particularly problematic in the Gulf of Mexico’s unstable and porous formations." Way over hyping the drilling risks. Thousands of wells have been safely drilled into reservoirs containg much higher pressures. More on that after seeing the movie
"By 8 p.m., after redoing the test, they all agreed that the Macondo was stable." No, "they all" didn't as was brought out in testimonies.
"They also believe that monitors should have allowed Mr. Revette’s team to spot the signs of leaking within the first 20 minutes. But Mr. Holloway detected no concern in the drill shack.
Whether the team was distracted by other tasks or rushing to get done or simply complacent may never be known." . No...it is known. Again details after the movie.
"But once the oil and gas got past the blowout preventer, there was nothing to stop them from racing up the Horizon’s riser pipe, the 5,000-foot umbilical cord to the rig." A complete LIE and every hand that has ever worked on a drill rig knows it. As mentioned before that "oil and gas" passing through the BOP is called "taking a kick" and the Rockman has seen a countless wells take a kick that was controlled ('killed the well") without activating the BOP. Perhaps our resident tool pusher will chime in after he sees the movie...if he can stomach it. LOL.
That's enough...not going to waste time reading the rest.