Asides

Something to watch tonight: Tuesday 23 January

By January 23, 2024No Comments

Dark Waters (Haynes, 2019)

Yesterday was a pub­lic hol­i­day in Wellington which is why there was no daily newsletter.

On Friday, I had the great oppor­tun­ity to inter­view the dir­ect­or Todd Haynes (I’m Not There., Far From Heaven, Carol) in advance of his new film May December which opens in New Zealand on the 15th of February.

Because I am a pro­fes­sion­al, I thought I should catch up with one his films that I hadn’t already seen, the leg­al drama Dark Waters which some­how had passed me by dur­ing the early pan­dem­ic kerfuffle.

I’m very glad I did. It’s a crack­er (but a bit of an out­lier from a Haynes point of view).

You’ll often find Haynes char­ac­ters rebelling against or res­ist­ing the roles that soci­ety has chosen for them – Dylan shape­shift­ing in I’m not There., the softly sapphic social res­ist­ance in Carol, the glam rock­ers rein­vent­ing pop in Velvet Goldmine.

In Dark Waters Mark Ruffalo plays an ambi­tious cor­por­ate law­yer from a work­ing class back­ground who decides that his con­science is bet­ter served by fight­ing against a massive phar­ma­ceut­ic­al com­pany rather than defend­ing one. So, yeah, maybe closer to a Haynes film than I gave it cred­it for earlier…

Ruffalo plays real-life hero Rob Bilott who spent dec­ades fight­ing to, firstly, prove that DuPont had poisoned pretty much every­one in the world with Teflon and then, secondly, get them to take some respons­ib­il­ity for it.

The second one hasn’t quite happened yet, but the film will abso­lutely enrage you as its care­ful and steady accu­mu­la­tion of evid­ence, and Bilott’s steely determ­in­a­tion, reveal an appalling scan­dal that says a lot about our ongo­ing reli­ance on big busi­ness that doesn’t care about us at all. 


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Where to watch Dark Waters

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa, Australia and UK: Streaming on Netflix

USA: Digital rental