The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Film reviews:

Dark Waters

- TJ MCKAY

A dogged fight for justice lasting more than 20 years exposes shady business practices and corporate greed in Dark Waters.

Inspired by the New York Times magazine article The Lawyer Who Became DuPont’s Worst Nightmare, director Todd Haynes’ slow-burning thriller details the ripple effect of a cover-up in 1970s West Virginia, which affects almost every living creature on the planet.

Screenwrit­ers Mario Correa and Matthew Michael Carnahan infuse a convention­al David versus Goliath legal wrangle with jangling paranoia reminiscen­t of The Parallax View.

They tether the inevitable courtroom showdown to an unlikely hero, who sacrifices his personal relationsh­ips to speak for thousands of men, women and children, who are victims of indifferen­ce on a grotesque scale.

Mark Ruffalo transforms from muscular Avengers superhero to a hunched, harangued, workaholic, who refuses to dodge his moral responsibi­lity.

Anne Hathaway is poorly served in comparison as his on-screen spouse, who witnesses the heavy emotional burden borne by her husband as he goes to war against a corporate behemoth.

Mild-mannered defence lawyer Robert Bilott (Ruffalo) works at Taft Stettinius & Hollister, which represents some of America’s most powerful chemicals companies.

Ahead of an important meeting with his boss, Tom Terp (Tim Robbins), Rob receives a visit from farmer Wilbur Tennant (Bill Camp), who lives in Parkersbur­g, West Virginia.

Wilbur is a neighbour of Rob’s grandmothe­r and has been persuaded to deliver a cardboard box of videotapes to the Taft office detailing the decimation of his cow herd on land adjoining a DuPont chemical plant.

Despite his heavy workload, Rob drives to Parkersbur­g to visit Wilbur, his wife Sarah (Denise Sal Vera) and their children. The lawyer is horrified to learn the family has lost almost 200 animals.

Rob unearths evidence that the man-made PFOA chemical used in the production of Teflon might have leaked into the Parkersbur­g water supply.

High-ranking DuPont executive Phil Donnelly (Victor Garber) frustrates Rob’s exhausting pursuit of the truth, which puts an intolerabl­e strain on lawyer Robert’s marriage to wife Sarah (Hathaway).

Dark Waters issues a primal scream of rage on behalf of thousands of victims, some of whom lost their lives before the first cash settlement.

By the time the end credits roll and a title card reveals the shocking extent of the chemical spill, our hackles are raised and any traces of PFOA in our bloodstrea­m boil with indignatio­n.

★★★★★☆☆

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 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Tim Robbins as Tom Terp, Anne Hathaway as Sarah Bilott and Mark Ruffalo as Robert Bilott in Dark Waters.
Picture: PA. Tim Robbins as Tom Terp, Anne Hathaway as Sarah Bilott and Mark Ruffalo as Robert Bilott in Dark Waters.

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