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Tapped

  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Tapped (2009)
Official Trailer
Play trailer5:43
1 Video
99+ Photos
Documentary

Examines the role of the bottled water industry and its effects on our health, climate change, pollution, and our reliance on oil.Examines the role of the bottled water industry and its effects on our health, climate change, pollution, and our reliance on oil.Examines the role of the bottled water industry and its effects on our health, climate change, pollution, and our reliance on oil.

  • Directors
    • Stephanie Soechtig
    • Jason Lindsey
  • Writers
    • Josh David
    • Jason Lindsey
    • Stephanie Soechtig
  • Stars
    • Sally Bethea
    • Earl Blumenauer
    • Amanda Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Stephanie Soechtig
      • Jason Lindsey
    • Writers
      • Josh David
      • Jason Lindsey
      • Stephanie Soechtig
    • Stars
      • Sally Bethea
      • Earl Blumenauer
      • Amanda Brown
    • 14User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Tapped
    Trailer 5:43
    Tapped

    Photos135

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    Top cast38

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    Sally Bethea
    • Self
    Earl Blumenauer
    • Self
    Amanda Brown
    • Self
    Eugene Brown
    • Self
    Robert Bullard
    • Self
    Suzie Canales
    • Self
    Ruth Caplan
    • Self
    Howard Dearborn
    Howard Dearborn
    • Self
    Joe Doss
    • Self
    Emily Fletcher
    • Self
    Shirley Franklin
    • Self
    Wenonah Hauter
    Wenonah Hauter
    • Self
    Mike Herndon
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    Jane Houlihan
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    Melissa Jarrell
    • Self
    Stephen King
    • Self
    Dennis Kucinich
    Dennis Kucinich
    • Self
    Barbara Lippert
    • Self
    • Directors
      • Stephanie Soechtig
      • Jason Lindsey
    • Writers
      • Josh David
      • Jason Lindsey
      • Stephanie Soechtig
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    7.31.3K
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-temple-1

    Taking our water for free and selling it back to us

    This incredibly shocking documentary and the similar documentary BLUE GOLD (2008, see my review), made by a different team, need to be seen by anyone interested in whether the human species will survive. (One would think all humans would be interested in this question, but so stupid are some people, that they actually are not interested, which is perhaps why our survival is really under threat, namely that the human species contains such a very large proportion of idiots.) It used to be said of a boring person that he was 'like a long drink of water'. Well, the ways things are going, long drinks of water are going to be in such short supply that we'll never be able to use that expression again. This film, unlike BLUE GOLD, limits itself to the United States and the Pacific Ocean. The film shows in detail that public water is being taken by big corporations like Nestle, Coca-Cola, and Pepsi-Cola at the rate of millions of gallons per day, bottled, and then sold back to us as 'bottled water' at 10,000 times profit. And the idiot politicians who allow this seem to think it is OK, perhaps because their wallets have increased by 10,000 times as well for being 'friendly' to the ruthless corporations. The toothless, useless Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has only one member of staff working half-time on the regulation of bottled water production in America! 70% of all bottled water in the USA is sold within the same state, so does not come under federal jurisdiction anyway. The remaining 30% is required to be tested, but the test results are not required to be filed with the FDA or divulged to anyone, and can remain secret within the private files of the corporations. So while municipal free water supplies are tested sometimes as often as 400 times a day, bottled water is effectively never tested. It often contains dangerous chemicals and contaminants. Since 1989 when bottled water began to become available in plastic bottles, which are made from petroleum at refineries, the bottled water for sale has often been full of deadly carcinogenic chemicals leeching out of the plastic into the water. The main dangerous chemicals are PET, PETE, and BPA (bisphenol A). Of these, BPA is the deadliest. So what does this mean? It means that water which is free (70% of all bottled water in the USA comes from municipal free water supplies and not from springs or wells!) is taken in gigantic quantities by large corporations, bottled in poisonous plastic bottles, and then sold to the public at a huge profit under the phoney pretext that it is 'safe' (but if municipal water is 'unsafe', why is 70% of bottled 'safe' water merely 'unsafe water' in a poisonous bottle?). But that is not the end of the story. The bottles are then all thrown away and make their way onto beaches and into the oceans. This is billions of plastic bottles per year. The Pacific Ocean for instance has a huge area larger than Texas known as a gyre which is just a vast sea of plastic. Every ocean has at least one such gyre. All the fish and other wildlife (turtles, seabirds, etc.) of the oceans are being killed by the plastic. In other words, bottled water is now one of the greatest threats to the planet, but even more urgently, it is one of the greatest threats to people. Don't you think it would be ironic if the human species ceased to exist because of bottled water? Wouldn't that just be the funniest of all cosmic jokes? For a species as stupid as humans, this is only fitting, that they should die with neither a bang nor a whimper, but with a pathetic, feeble gurgle. This film was produced by the same people who made WHO KILLED THE ELECTRIC CAR? (2006). The directors of this one are Stephanie Soechtig and Jason Lindsey, both of whom also co-wrote it with Josh David. They clearly had a much bigger budget and team than the people who made BLUE GOLD. Both films and their DVD 'extras' need to be seen together. They do not duplicate, but rather they complement, each other. And I shall here add something which I included in my review of BLUE GOLD: As Ford Madox Ford said in the February, 1924, issue of The Transatlantic Review, of which he was editor: 'That one should stand by and observe without a note of warning the sure shadow of doom engulfing a civilisation would be to display an equanimity passing the power of most men.'
    3hatuva

    One sided and combative.

    I live in a major city. My tap water sometimes has unacceptable levels of fecal coliforms so they add so much chlorine when i take a shower my throat burns. Research the epidemic of prescription meds in tap water, municipalities are not equipped to remove them. I agree there are problems but trying to demonize everyone won't truly solve problems. Wish you had done more balanced report. In one part they claim water is shipped out of state then when they criticize FDA they say most of the water stays in state. They don't discuss job creation and local economic concerns. Also if this is such a huge industry, there is a need being met. My tap doesn't exist 3 hours from home and I'm not carrying a day's water supply on my back everywhere I go. No alternatives were presented.
    9jzappa

    Again, Science and Law Vs. Misinformation and Materialism

    This enlightening, competently investigated and imperative documentary with a fantastic opening titles sequence seizes the various health and environmental concerns associated with the privatization of water. Bottled water corporations make masses of proceeds every year, but are they entitled to exhaust a small town's water supply without previous permission and without restoring it? Fryebyrg, Maine, endured a water famine while, in tandem, Coca-Cola continued to pump their already deficient supply. It's revealed that the bottled water industry is unregulated and causes health hazards. Tap water, however, is thoroughly regulated. Municipalities test water for toxins nonstop every day.

    Director Stephanie Soechtig jabs acutely at the predicament of water with specific and vital insights, eschewing disproportionate use of talking heads. For instance, I feel like I should've already known that the Pacific has a portion overflowing with plastic. Numerous corporations employ the chemical BPA to make their bottles, a neurotoxin that potentially causes various neurological disorders. There's no denying that any and every form of growth are all endangered when science and law mingle with misinformation and materialism. At least documentaries like Tapped appear every so often to nurture awareness, to notify the people and clear the daze of party lines. Whether or not Tapped will help to heal the public's indifference toward progress and environmental causes is a different affair.

    Tapped does to bottled water manufacturing what Food, Inc. and Super Size Me did to food monopolies. It's an exposé of champion reporting. Some will likely put the propaganda label on Tapped however, and one could split those hairs, insomuch as it's predisposed to a certain alliance. But the information is indisputable, unlike the propaganda of today that functions to make us believe what its makers don't believe themselves. Tapped joins the crusade to battle corporate Goliaths who have milked local water supplies to sell it in toxic bottles, sometimes during droughts that constrain towns to rigorously limit their own water use.

    We're first brought to Fryeburg, where one day, their standard of living is as it's been for generations, and the next day enormous trucks roll in. Without any prior communication, Nestle just silently procured land to tap for water, and since then they've been rolling those trucks in and out, extracting from the local spring but paying no taxes to recover the community. And unlike other trades, they're not even required to purchase resources to make their product, save for those plastic bottles, made by petroleum factories with cancer-causing constituents.

    All effective modern documentaries seem to need statistical facts presented in graphic design effects to give their allegations a source. And in an age of instant gratification, they must. Conservative Libertarians want to know what's wrong with someone making a buck? Well, just 1% of the water that envelops 75% of the planet is drinkable. A year before this documentary was finished, there was a drought in 35 of 50 States. No water, no life. The first words said in Tapped are, "By 2030, two-thirds of the world will not have access to clean drinking water."

    During a Raleigh drought, Pepsi kept hauling over 400,000 gallons a day. How are such reckless actions possible in a democracy? Well, the FDA, we gather from intense footage of Senate hearings, relies on tests run by the companies themselves! Meanwhile, one FDA pen-pusher is accountable for supervision of the entire industry. Put in close-up and faced with facts, we ultimately even hear the FDA publicist telling Soechtig that if he'd known this was the course the interview was to take, he wouldn't have agreed to grant the interview. Why does the FDA even need a publicist?

    A visit to Corpus Christi familiarizes us with residents who live within miles of the factory producing the plastic bottles used by the big three water manufacturers. All have health troubles. The more you watch, the more scared and livid you become. American industry has been reduced to a criminal kingdom over the last thirty years, but the bottled water industry has clearly avoided greater scrutiny. Hopefully, that's changing. It all boils down to water as a rudimentary birthright, a raw material owned by us all. If you begin commodifying bare essentials of life in such a way as to make it harder for people to get to them, you have the footing for grave political volatility.
    9imdbfan-5539883184

    Opens your world to the water bottled word

    Who would you trust: one single person boasting that billions of bottles of water are safe with no presentable proof, or municipalities who test cities' waters at least 300 times a month for safe drinking tap, water? This is the underlying question that Tapped, directed by Stephanie Soechtig, is forcing upon big water bottle production companies, such as Nestle, Coke, and Pepsi. The documentary follows a style of personal accounts and their experiences with big water bottle corporations and their negative impacts. For example, residents of Fryeburg, Maine experienced a sudden lack of water due to Nestle's monopolization of the local groundwater, and eventually selling it back to the community to make a profit. Soechtig highlights water bottle manufacturers as this being their sole purpose. Throughout the film, she also makes publicly embarrassing corporate heads an edge on her perspective, showing how even the people who represent Dasani, Fiji, and other big water bottle name brands lack water usage awareness. For example, during a court hearing about Nestle's draining of groundwater, they blamed beavers for the depletion instead of taking responsibility. Concurrently, a Nestle worker was not aware of the dozens of accounts of water bottle recalls even from their own company. Soechtig also shares the story of residents in Corpus Christi and the harmful respiratory effects it has had on their life. The use of statistics like plastic water bottle manufacturers using 714 million gallons of oil per year (enough to fuel 100,000 cars) emphasis the need for more regulations. Soechtig takes a scientific approach when testing 2 groups: one with water bottles from store shelves and the other with bottles left in the trunk of a car. Toxicologists, across both groups, found fatal chemicals such as Toluene (a constituent of gasoline), Styrene (a cancer causing agent), and Phthalates (adverse reproductive outputs to both genders). Towards the end of the film, embarrassing videos of trash lining the coast of Camilla Beach show the world how much garbage is put into the oceans. This is supported with a sample from the west coast of the U. S waters filled with 49% more plastic than plankton. The most significant sustainability aspects from the film reside in the importance of tap water. During the end credits, multiple sustainable actions are presented to the viewer like invest in our municipal water structure, stop promotion of bottled water, buy a reusable water bottle, buy a water filter, and demand bottled water manufacturers allow access for their reports. Using more tap water, in my opinion, is the strongest and overarching message of this film, and is presented strongly (40% of bottled water is just filtered tap water). This film not only made me rethink about how guilty I'll be next time I grab a plastic water bottle, but about how it will take a majority of the country to see it this way. Watching this film, with its importance of community and need to fight back against the greed of corporate water bottle companies, forever changed my view on plastic water bottles, in that, I feel as if they should go on a drought from themselves.
    10whirling-darkness

    A vital movie everyone should watch.

    I finished watching this movie less than an hour ago and I'm deeply touched by the information presented in it. The documentary is well structured and presents an overwhelming amount of evidence which will change the way anyone thinks about bottled and municipal water. Both the "manufacture" of the water itself, and also where the bottles come from, where they go after use and how they influence our lives while they're with us. I see this movie has only had one review and a few votes since it came on this site. That is a crying shame because this movie needs to be seen by every single person alive. The willful absence of major companies such as Coke, Pepsi and Nestle is extremely telling in light of all the material presented. One can only hope that the small voice of this film will be heard over the huge booming commercial machine that these and other companies represent in the popular media. If you haven't seen this movie, simply watch it. It's that good and the information is something everyone should know.

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    • Quotes

      Charles Moore: If you eliminate the scourge of bottled water, you'll be eliminating one of the biggest problems facing our environment.

    • Soundtracks
      Effect and Cause
      Written by Jack White

      Performed by The White Stripes

      courtesy of Warner Music

      by arrangement with WMG TV & Film Licensing

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 31, 2009 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Вода в бутылке
    • Production company
      • Atlas Films (III)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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