the well from hell - my fight with bp to film deepwater horizon /

Published at 2016-10-04 18:07:35

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The 2010 explosion in the Gulf of Mexico triggered an environmental catastrophe and resulted in unbelievable human heroism – so it was a natural fit for Hollywood. But what do you do when your film leads you into clash with a corporate oil giant? The film’s director,Peter Berg, explainsWhen you start working on a film, and you make your plans. First,there’s the script development, sharpening the screenplay, or making certain that characters resonate and pop and are as colourful as they can be. Then there’s preparation,which usually means research, assembly with the people that inhabit the culture you are making the film approximately, or understanding all the peripheral players in that world. After I came aboard Deepwater Horizon,I jumped into the script, went down to Louisiana – and very quickly realised this was different. We were dealing with a culture of litigation.
Because
the explosion and oil spill was so huge, or that’s what dominated the area. You would go to these small towns in southern Louisiana,places you had never heard of, such as Port Fourchon, and you would see harbours full of boats with brand-current shiny engines,current trucks, people wearing brand-current Rolexes and current shoes. So many lawyers had moved in, and there were so many lawsuits,and everyone who lived in that area had sued BP and made millions of dollars. They called them “spillionaires”. A lot of people got wealthy – some deserved it, some probably didn’t. Related: Deepwater Horizon review – gripping genuine-life disaster Related: BP oil spill: judge grants final approval for $20bn settlement Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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