Editor's Notes
The view from here
Darlow Smithson brings Underwear Bomber to Discovery
Blur doc runs to BBC Two
Discovery Networks International names international head of content, loses COO
Discovery and the United Nations spotlight 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity
Indigo Film & TV sells 71 hours
CABLEready gets the greenlight for 'Intersections'
Docmakers mourn Marcel Simard
Hot Docs announces the participation of eight official delegations
BBC Trust and Back To The Planet to train Turkmen to create first wildlife doc
Cream Productions follows up 'Aftermath'
Documentary maker analyses ethics in edit suite
Actor and 'Two Coreys' star Corey Haim dies
Mayor of Taiji, Japan protests 'The Cove' Oscar win
Oscar nod doesn't guarantee increased audiences for docs
Huffington Post talks Oscar docs
Founder of Babelgum and Fastweb arrested
BBC to make major cuts: report
Wildlife filmmaker Chris Palmer says to look, but not touch after SeaWorld death
STV threatens legal action against ITV over X Factor spin-offs
BBC to apologize for "distorting some known facts" on PanoramaThe view from here
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Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Jun 25, 2009 |
Joe Berlinger is probably best known to non-doc audiences for his team up with Bruce Sinofsky on Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, but his other vérité-style creations with Sinofsky, Brother's Keeper and Paradise Lost, are stories of gripping court cases that continue to lure audiences to this day.
Flying solo, Berlinger has created a new feature doc following yet another court case, this one effecting over 30,000 people. Crude is the story of the ongoing $27 billion court case between Chevron and the people of Ecuador who have been dealing with the aftermath of Texaco (which merged with Chevron in 2001) pulling out of the region after drilling since the 1960s. The film shows a region where the soil and the water is visibly full of oil and people are getting sick and dying at high rates.
Berlinger was first brought to the region by Steven Donziger, the consulting attorney for the plaintiffs, in 2005. At that time the filmmaker was skeptical about taking on this story because it was a 13-year-old case, and he was happily working on his commercial and television projects, such as Sundance's Iconoclasts, of which he is a co-creator. But after voyaging to the Amazon to see the devastation for himself, he quickly felt that this was a story he had to tell.
When he arrived in Ecuador, the first sight he saw that hit him hard enough to make him want to dedicate three years of his life to the story was a group of people sitting around a large can of tuna. The image of these people sitting in the heart of the rainforest, one of the world's more important natural resources, eating fish out of a can struck him hard. "It was partially the tuna and partially the US media ignoring the story that made me want to make this film," says Berlinger.
For the first year that Berlinger was working on Crude he was funding it himself. Not since Brother's Keeper has he made a film that wasn't first funded by television, but he was willing to start telling this story on his own dime. Berlinger feels one must be as much a business person as a filmmaker in the doc business in order to successfully make films, and a key to his success is that he is both. In the end, Crude was funded in part by Netflix's now-defunct Red Envelope division, partially by a few friends of Berlinger's and the rest through a private investor.
Crude, which just won the One World Media Award for best international documentary, has also won a number of other awards from festivals including from Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, Big Sky Documentary Film Festival and a Human Spirit Award from the Nashville Film Festival.
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