Film Reveals How Stakes Have Been Raised On All Sides In One Of The Most Important Environmental Issues Facing The Nation Today
In the explosive follow-up to his Oscar®-nominated documentary
"Gasland," filmmaker Josh Fox uses his trademark dark humor to take a deeper,
broader look at the dangers of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, the
controversial method of extracting natural gas and oil, now occurring on a
global level (in 32 countries worldwide).
Debuting MONDAY, JULY 8 (9:00-11:15 p.m. ET/PT), exclusively on HBO, GASLAND PART II shows how the stakes have been raised on all sides in one of the most important environmental issues facing the nation today. The film argues that the gas industry's portrayal of natural gas as a clean and safe alternative to oil is a myth, and that fracked wells inevitably leak over time, contaminating water and air, hurting families, and endangering the earth's climate with the potent greenhouse gas, methane. In addition, the film looks at how the powerful oil and gas industries are, in Fox's words, "contaminating our democracy." The timely documentary premiered at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival.
Other HBO playdates: July 8 (4:55 a.m.), 11 (8:15 a.m., 4:15 p.m.), 14 (3:15 p.m.), 17 (1:45 p.m., midnight) and 20 (9:10 a.m.)
HBO2 playdates: July 10 (8:00 p.m.) and 25 (3:50 a.m.)
HBO Documentary Films presents another weekly series this summer, debuting provocative new specials every Monday through August 12. Other July films include: "Gideon's Army" (July 1); "The Crash Reel" (July 15); "The Cheshire Murders" (July 24); and "First Comes Love" (July 29).
Ever since theater director-turned-filmmaker Josh Fox was approached five years ago with an unexpected offer of $100,000 for the natural gas drilling rights to his property in the Delaware River Basin, on the border of New York and Pennsylvania, he has been on a mission to investigate and expose the environmental risks of hydraulic facturing. His first film, "Gasland," debuted at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Special Jury Prize, and made its HBO debut later that year. The film was subsequently shown in more than 30 countries to an estimated 50 million viewers. In addition to an Oscar® nomination for Best Documentary Feature, "Gasland" won an Emmy® for Best Nonfiction Directing and was nominated for three other Emmys®. As a result of his activism, Fox was awarded the 2010 Lennon Ono Grant for Peace by Yoko Ono.
GASLAND PART II begins with the 2012 State of the Union Address, in which President Obama declares his support for the safe development of natural gas production, something Fox and the anti-fracking community believe is impossible. Beneath the continental U.S., some contend, lies a vast underground ocean of natural gas waiting to be harvested, with the potential to supply energy to millions of Americans.
However, as Fox explained in "Gasland," the drilling process, called hydraulic fracturing or fracking, is exempted by the Bush-Cheney Energy Policy Act of 2005 from the United States' most basic environmental regulations, including the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Clean Air Act, and poses many environmental threats to water and air.
In "Gasland," Fox discovered tap water so contaminated it could be set on fire
right out of the tap, chronically ill residents with similar symptoms in
drilling areas across the country, and huge pools of toxic waste that kill
livestock and vegetation. In GASLAND PART ll, he revisits
families whose lives have been upended from living near fracking wells and
introduces new characters. Fox interviews politicians who have been trying to
stop fracking and help the people affected by it, as well as experts who support
Fox's concerns about the dangers of fracking and the urgent need for a shift to
truly clean renewable energy.
Fox returns to Dimock, Pa.,
Pavilion, Wyo., and Dish, Tex. to see how the residents are faring in their
fight to secure clean water from local governments and the E.P.A., and ventures
to Australia to see what is happening outside the U.S. as fracking becomes a
global practice.
In order to understand the potential dangers of fracking, Fox interviews Tony
Ingraffea, Professor of Engineering, Cornell University, a former researcher for
the gas industry. Ingraffea, who was named one of Time magazine's People
Who Matter in 2011, explains why in his opinion, fracking can never be done
safely. He illustrates how cement in wells can be vulnerable to cracking and
that once it has cracked, methane gas can migrate into any underground source of
drinking water.
In GASLAND PART ll, Fox also argues that new choices must be made about where
the nation gets its energy. He talks to Stanford professor Mark Jacobson, who
argues that the U.S. could stop drilling for coal, oil and natural gas
altogether and bundle together the renewable resources of wind,
high-concentrated solar power, geothermal power, hydroelectric power and tidal
power to handle the country's current energy needs.
But Fox's biggest concern in GASLAND PART ll is perhaps his belief that "the
enormously powerful oil and gas industry has not only contaminated our water,
air and land, but also our democracy."
Towards the film's conclusion, Fox is arrested trying to film a congressional
hearing regarding the E.P.A. results in Pavilion. But as the fight to protect
the earth from extreme energy development seems even more challenging, Fox
remains determined and undeterred.
GASLAND PART II is directed and produced by Josh Fox; produced by Trish Adlesic;
produced by Deborah Wallace; co-producer, Matthew Sanchez; cinematography, Josh
Fox and Matthew Sanchez; editor, Matthew Sanchez. For HBO: senior producer,
Nancy Abraham; executive producer, Sheila Nevins.
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