I have heard good things about that movie.
I don't have a bone to pick in the ideological quarrel, just here commenting that I drive around fracking operations a good deal and have not seen ANY environmental destruction, pollution, etc.
I would like to apologize if my posts in this thread feel like an attack against Mother Nature in any way. I had ZERO idea about all those facts. I thought gasland was the gospel. "Nuff said" I used to think myself. Then I used a tool called google and started learning about all those claims.
I believe we can't get fast enough to almost free fusion energy for everyone to use. But I also believe we should not enrich nations selling oil to everyone, collecting Ferrari in the middle of the desert not even spending 0.5% of their riches into solar energy solution from the oil Aliburton helped them getting.
Then... Matt Damon fracking film backed by big OPEC member:
http://economy.money.cnn.com/2012/10/01/matt-damon-fracking/Matt Damon's new film on fracking, "Promised Land", is generating some buzz -- though probably not the kind studio execs were hoping for.
Last week, the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation pointed out that in the trailer for film, one of the financial backers listed is Image Nation Abu Dhabi.
Image Nation Abu Dhabi is, in turn, owned by Abu Dhabi Media - a state media company for the United Arab Emirates. The UAE, an OPEC member, is the world's third-largest oil exporter.
For a film that highlights the dangers of fracking -- the controversial process that has unleashed an energy boom in the United States -- this may be problematic, as evidenced by Twitter posts Monday:
Matt Damon makes anti-fracking propaganda film funded by United Arab Emirates. Trying to keep USA dependent on OPEC? blog.heritage.org/2012/09/28/mat…—
Scott Manley (@ManleyWMC) October 01, 2012
Green Weenie of the Week: Matt Damon. powerlineblog.com/archives/2012/… Has there ever been a more deserving Green Weenie winner? #tcot—
Power Line (@powerlineUS) October 01, 2012
Critics contend the UAE is trying to drum up opposition to more U.S. oil production, which could compete with its crude exports.
It's also possible the UAE -- which has financed at least a half-dozen Hollywood films -- overlooked the conflict of interest and simply thought the film was a good investment due to its all-star cast (Oscar winner Frances McDormand and John Krasinski of "The Office fame co-star) and director (Gus Van Sant).
A spokeswoman for Image Nation Abu Dhabi said that while the company gets "supporting funds" from the Abu Dhabi government, it is a "commercially-driven and independently-operated" entity.
A spokeswoman for Participant Media, which arranged financing for the film, said the funding was part of a larger deal with Image Nation Abu Dhabi to invest in 15 to 18 films over a five year time period, "regardless of genre or subject matter."
Either way, the revelation could be a setback for a film on an important U.S. energy topic, and will only give ammunition to critics who say the movie was biased from the get-go.