PodParley PodParley

Dark Waters

Todd Haynes’ meticulous reconstruction of the case brought by a corporate lawyer, played by Mark Ruffalo, against the huge chemical company DuPont, is a devastating indictment of the power of big companies to avoid accountability. Dark Waters tells the story of Robert Bilott, a corporate lawyer with a Cincinnati firm that specialized in defending big chemical corporations against lawsuits. In what seemed a most unlikely turn of events, Bilott became a chief attorney in a lawsuit against one of the biggest chemical companies of all: DuPont. Bilott is played by Mark Ruffalo, who seems older, more dour, and certainly more conventional in this part than other roles I’ve seen him in. He kind of disappears into the character of this real-life attorney, which is something that the best actors know how to do. Rob Bilott is very private, self-contained, quiet and hard-working. The son of an Air Force officer, he lived in several places growing up, including Parkersburg, West Virginia, close to the Ohio border. The story begins with an unexpected visit, in 1998, to Bilott’s Cincinnati office by a farmer from Parkersburg, wanting help with the problem of contamination of his water supply from a nearby DuPont landfill. The farmer, Wilbur Tennant, played by the wonderful character actor Bill Camp, got the lawyer’s name from Bilott’s grandmother, who lives in Parkersburg. Bilott is in the middle of an important meeting, and he’s just been named a partner in the firm, so he is immediately dismissive of Tennant, saying he’ll get him a list of other possible lawyers. But the connection to his grandmother sticks in his mind, so he decides to visit her a while later in Parkersburg, and in the meantime take a look into what this farmer has to say. What he finds is that Tennant’s cattle have been dying mysteriously, about 190 cows perishing from tumors and bloated organs. So Bilott begins, rather modestly at first, by telling his boss, who is played by Tim Robbins, that he wants to file for discovery concerning what chemicals were dumped at the landfill, including the results of a visit from the EPA. He doesn’t find anything, but the recurring mention in the documents of a chemical called PFOA, for which he can find no mention or definition anywhere, makes him suspect that the problem might have been something not regulated by the EPA. Bilott’s resulting lawsuit to get more documents results in some serious conflict with executives at DuPont, who have had a friendly relationship with the law firm, and it creates tension and controversy within the firm itself. After a few years, Bilott discovers that PFOA is a chemical, also called C8, that was used in the making of Teflon, that product for stick-free pots and pans, and that internal DuPont documents show serious health hazards, not just to farm animals, but to human beings. C8 has been dumped in the water supply, and is causing cancer and other ailments. So the case goes on, ultimately stretching across two decades. Dark Waters is part of a genre that you might call the “crusading lawyer” story. The director is Todd Haynes, who is generally known as an experimenter, in form or subject, specializing in films that upend typical ideas of plot by introducing subversive themes. This film is far more straightforward in its style than what Haynes usually does. What it is, is a film about process. The director and his screenwriters, Matthew Michael Carnahan and Mario Correra, painstakingly reconstruct each step of the way Bilott gradually puts together a devastating case against DuPont. This includes all the setbacks and disappointments in a lawsuit of this magnitude against a powerful corporation. One of the biggest things that comes across here is that such huge companies, with t...

An episode of the Flicks with The Film Snob podcast, hosted by Chris Dashiell, titled "Dark Waters" was published on February 12, 2020 and runs 4 minutes.

February 12, 2020 ·4m · Flicks with The Film Snob

0:00 / 0:00

Todd Haynes’ meticulous reconstruction of the case brought by a corporate lawyer, played by Mark Ruffalo, against the huge chemical company DuPont, is a devastating indictment of the power of big companies to avoid accountability. Dark Waters tells the story of Robert Bilott, a corporate lawyer with a Cincinnati firm that specialized in defending big chemical corporations against lawsuits. In what seemed a most unlikely turn of events, Bilott became a chief attorney in a lawsuit against one of the biggest chemical companies of all: DuPont. Bilott is played by Mark Ruffalo, who seems older, more dour, and certainly more conventional in this part than other roles I’ve seen him in. He kind of disappears into the character of this real-life attorney, which is something that the best actors know how to do. Rob Bilott is very private, self-contained, quiet and hard-working. The son of an Air Force officer, he lived in several places growing up, including Parkersburg, West Virginia, close to the Ohio border. The story begins with an unexpected visit, in 1998, to Bilott’s Cincinnati office by a farmer from Parkersburg, wanting help with the problem of contamination of his water supply from a nearby DuPont landfill. The farmer, Wilbur Tennant, played by the wonderful character actor Bill Camp, got the lawyer’s name from Bilott’s grandmother, who lives in Parkersburg. Bilott is in the middle of an important meeting, and he’s just been named a partner in the firm, so he is immediately dismissive of Tennant, saying he’ll get him a list of other possible lawyers. But the connection to his grandmother sticks in his mind, so he decides to visit her a while later in Parkersburg, and in the meantime take a look into what this farmer has to say. What he finds is that Tennant’s cattle have been dying mysteriously, about 190 cows perishing from tumors and bloated organs. So Bilott begins, rather modestly at first, by telling his boss, who is played by Tim Robbins, that he wants to file for discovery concerning what chemicals were dumped at the landfill, including the results of a visit from the EPA. He doesn’t find anything, but the recurring mention in the documents of a chemical called PFOA, for which he can find no mention or definition anywhere, makes him suspect that the problem might have been something not regulated by the EPA. Bilott’s resulting lawsuit to get more documents results in some serious conflict with executives at DuPont, who have had a friendly relationship with the law firm, and it creates tension and controversy within the firm itself. After a few years, Bilott discovers that PFOA is a chemical, also called C8, that was used in the making of Teflon, that product for stick-free pots and pans, and that internal DuPont documents show serious health hazards, not just to farm animals, but to human beings. C8 has been dumped in the water supply, and is causing cancer and other ailments. So the case goes on, ultimately stretching across two decades. Dark Waters is part of a genre that you might call the “crusading lawyer” story. The director is Todd Haynes, who is generally known as an experimenter, in form or subject, specializing in films that upend typical ideas of plot by introducing subversive themes. This film is far more straightforward in its style than what Haynes usually does. What it is, is a film about process. The director and his screenwriters, Matthew Michael Carnahan and Mario Correra, painstakingly reconstruct each step of the way Bilott gradually puts together a devastating case against DuPont. This includes all the setbacks and disappointments in a lawsuit of this magnitude against a powerful corporation. One of the biggest things that comes across here is that such huge companies, with t...

Todd Haynes’ meticulous reconstruction of the case brought by a corporate lawyer, played by Mark Ruffalo, against the huge chemical company DuPont, is a devastating indictment of the power of big companies to avoid accountability.

Dark Waters
tells the story of Robert Bilott, a corporate lawyer with a Cincinnati firm that specialized in defending big chemical corporations against lawsuits. In what seemed a most unlikely turn of events, Bilott became a chief attorney in a lawsuit against one of the biggest chemical companies of all: DuPont.

Bilott is played by Mark Ruffalo, who seems older, more dour, and certainly more conventional in this part than other roles I’ve seen him in. He kind of disappears into the character of this real-life attorney, which is something that the best actors know how to do. Rob Bilott is very private, self-contained, quiet and hard-working. The son of an Air Force officer, he lived in several places growing up, including Parkersburg, West Virginia, close to the Ohio border. The story begins with an unexpected visit, in 1998, to Bilott’s Cincinnati office by a farmer from Parkersburg, wanting help with the problem of contamination of his water supply from a nearby DuPont landfill. The farmer, Wilbur Tennant, played by the wonderful character actor Bill Camp, got the lawyer’s name from Bilott’s grandmother, who lives in Parkersburg. Bilott is in the middle of an important meeting, and he’s just been named a partner in the firm, so he is immediately dismissive of Tennant, saying he’ll get him a list of other possible lawyers. But the connection to his grandmother sticks in his mind, so he decides to visit her a while later in Parkersburg, and in the meantime take a look into what this farmer has to say.

What he finds is that Tennant’s cattle have been dying mysteriously, about 190 cows perishing from tumors and bloated organs. So Bilott begins, rather modestly at first, by telling his boss, who is played by Tim Robbins, that he wants to file for discovery concerning what chemicals were dumped at the landfill, including the results of a visit from the EPA. He doesn’t find anything, but the recurring mention in the documents of a chemical called PFOA, for which he can find no mention or definition anywhere, makes him suspect that the problem might have been something not regulated by the EPA. Bilott’s resulting lawsuit to get more documents results in some serious conflict with executives at DuPont, who have had a friendly relationship with the law firm, and it creates tension and controversy within the firm itself. After a few years, Bilott discovers that PFOA is a chemical, also called C8, that was used in the making of Teflon, that product for stick-free pots and pans, and that internal DuPont documents show serious health hazards, not just to farm animals, but to human beings. C8 has been dumped in the water supply, and is causing cancer and other ailments. So the case goes on, ultimately stretching across two decades.

Dark Waters is part of a genre that you might call the “crusading lawyer” story. The director is Todd Haynes, who is generally known as an experimenter, in form or subject, specializing in films that upend typical ideas of plot by introducing subversive themes. This film is far more straightforward in its style than what Haynes usually does. What it is, is a film about process. The director and his screenwriters, Matthew Michael Carnahan and Mario Correra, painstakingly reconstruct each step of the way Bilott gradually puts together a devastating case against DuPont. This includes all the setbacks and disappointments in a lawsuit of this magnitude against a powerful corporation. One of the biggest things that comes across here is that such huge companies, with t...

Future Flicks with Billiam The SomewhatNerdy Podcast Network Future Flicks is a podcast about flicks that come out, wait for it, in the future! In this podcast your host Billiam from SomewhatNerdy.com will go over all the movies coming out during the week, tell you his pick, and throw in his thoughts and occasionally trivia and news. He’ll also throw in a movie review every podcast or two for a suggestion on what to watch during a night in. So check out Future Flicks because why use Google to tell you what movies are coming out when you can have an opinionated Nerd do it for you. Box Office Premiere Podcasts Box Office is a weekly film show on Virgin Media Two, which takes a look at the pick of the flicks in cinemas, along with a host of fun film features. Flick Switch Flickswitch Flick Switch is far more than a rigging rental company. We have built our business on delivering high quality solutions with years of experience in a wide variety of markets, including film, television, live events, international touring and theatre.With our years of experience in audio, lighting, screens, sets, (and the list goes on) we can go further than just the support rigging. We are also able to rig the equipment too. Planning and installing the power and data distribution, fixtures, fly systems and other equipment, fine tuning, focusing and operating.When you engage Flick Switch yo Mark Fricks - The Road Less Traveled Mark Fricks Federal Employees - The Retirement Road Less Traveled with Financial Adviser and Federal Employee Advocate Mark Fricks. Mark Shares the mission behind the 2nd edition of The Book "The Road Less Traveled." This is a Financial Roadmap for Federal Employees seeking a secure retirement.
URL copied to clipboard!