Sunday Territorian

DEEPWATER HORIZON (M)

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Director: Peter Berg ( Lone Survivor) Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Kurt Russell, Gina Rodriguez, John Malkovich, Kate Hudson Rating: ***

This here’s what one might call a docu-disaster movie: where a real-life catastroph­e will be restaged for both your education and entertainm­ent. If you wish to be educated, well, Deepwater

Horizon will give you the retrospect­ive scoop on one of the biggest preventabl­e man-made catastroph­es of all time. If you wish to be entertaine­d, well,

Deepwater Horizon has plenty of Mark Wahlberg emoting manfully as a monster oil rig goes up in flames around him.

Luckily, the right balance is struck between lasting informatio­n and disposable thrills.

The infamous incident depicted here took place on April 20, 2010, in calm waters about 60km off the coast of Louisiana.

As evening descended, the go-ahead was given for a semi-submersibl­e oil rig run by fuel giant British Petroleum (BP) to commence fullscale drilling of a promising new site on the ocean floor.

In a matter of hours, 11 of the 126 men employed on the rig were dead. Scores more were seriously injured. Over 5 million barrels of oil gushed into the Gulf of Mexico.

The end result was one of the greatest environmen­tal disasters in history.

The rig combusted and collapsed due to the usual safety protocols for new drilling sites being roundly ignored.

The Louisiana project was already way behind schedule, and BP wanted all that oily money flowing back into its coffers ASAP.

So BP’s reps rode its rig contractor­s hard, and a go button was pushed, in spite of the concerns of those who knew what the consequenc­es could be.

Due to the highly technical perfect storm of snafus that had to happen for the disaster to be triggered, Deepwater Horizon has to fill its screenplay with a heck of a lot of oilman mumbo-jumbo.

A lot of it is gushing out from underneath the thick moustache and New Orleans accent of Kurt Russell as the good old safety officer who can feel the bad times coming his way.

This is where a secondary plot melodramat­ically exploring tensions between working-class heroes like the rig’s chief electrics man (Wahlberg) and villains such as BP’s chief slick-talker (John Malkovich) become so important in Deepwater Horizon.

Instead of panicking about working out what is happening, viewers are free to panic about whether or not their favourite characters will survive the gargantuan inferno.

Time will tell.

 ??  ?? Mark Wahlberg faces down a firey inferno in the true tale depicted in Deepwater Horizon
Mark Wahlberg faces down a firey inferno in the true tale depicted in Deepwater Horizon

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