I got mine hot off the press yesterday and watched it this morning. I hate to have to compare it to End of Suburbia, but it is the best way to explain what this movie offers that others don't. First, this movie is much more focused on global impact and employs many more international experts than EOS. I also like that it really drives home the point that population is ultimately the underlying problem when it comes to fossil fuel depletion.
The best part of the movie was the historical focus. The producers show Baku, Lake Maracaibo, and McCamey, Texas in their heyday, then they smack you over the head with the current situation in the form of abandoned fields and rigs, and it just makes you want to puke.
The experts in this movie absolutely beat the piss out of the official line on reserve numbers.
In terms of the players, we get the usual dose of Simmons and Campbell. It was refreshing to see Roscoe Bartlett and Matt Savinar weigh in with their insight. Matt's value to this movie is cutting through the bullshit when this movie flirts with possible techno-fixes (nice work explaining that "solving" peak oil is like colonizing pluto, not landing on the moon). For the most part, David Goodstein is the star in this movie the way Kunstler is in EOS. He gets an A- for his performance. He is crystal clear in explaining the facts in layman's terms, yet he has this look of horror on his face the entire time that almost has more impact on the viewer than the substance of what he is saying. He goes a little awry when discussing how he thinks a space type program for energy could save us, but you get the idea he doesn't really believe this when he then breaks down the numbers for nukes and biomass, although he does leave a glimpse of hope on the solar issue. In the end, at least we don't get the New Urbanism mantra from EOS and the movie pretty much tells you it's over for hydrocarbon man.
The production of this movie is incredible. It's even crisper than EOS. My only beef is that it really seemed long, although I realize it is about the same time length as EOS. I just think the producers could have shaved off ten or twenty minutes cutting out all of the cool shots of deserts, obscene energy infrasturcture, Saudis in flowing robes, and giving us the schlocky '50's/60's era U.S. petroleum commercials that we saw in EOS. My point is, I felt like I gave birth after this movie, so I think the unitiated might turn this thing off halfway in or have to take it in small doses. Oh yeah, and the classical music track in the background gets annoying after a while.
Anyway, this was well worth the $40 and a great educational resource for peak oil newbies and experts alike, although I should note there is nothing that earth shattering for anyone following peak oil issues the last few years.