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GasLand

  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
11K
YOUR RATING
GasLand (2010)
Documentary

An exploration of the fracking petroleum extraction industry and the serious environmental consequences involved.An exploration of the fracking petroleum extraction industry and the serious environmental consequences involved.An exploration of the fracking petroleum extraction industry and the serious environmental consequences involved.

  • Director
    • Josh Fox
  • Writer
    • Josh Fox
  • Stars
    • Josh Fox
    • Dick Cheney
    • Pete Seeger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Josh Fox
    • Writer
      • Josh Fox
    • Stars
      • Josh Fox
      • Dick Cheney
      • Pete Seeger
    • 53User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 9 wins & 8 nominations total

    Photos13

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    Top cast43

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    Josh Fox
    Josh Fox
    • Self
    Dick Cheney
    Dick Cheney
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Pete Seeger
    Pete Seeger
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Richard Nixon
    Richard Nixon
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Aubrey K. McClendon
    Aubrey K. McClendon
    • Self
    Pat Fernelli
    • Self - Resident
    Ron Carter
    • Self - Resident
    Jean Carter
    • Self - Resident
    Norma Fiorentino
    • Self - Resident
    Debbie May
    • Self - Resident
    Mike Markham
    • Self
    Marsha Mendenhall
    • Self
    Dave Neslin
    • Self
    Jesse Ellsworth
    • Self
    Amee Ellsworth
    • Self
    Renee McClure
    • Self
    Weston Wilson
    Weston Wilson
    • Self
    Jeff Walker
    • Self - Resident
    • Director
      • Josh Fox
    • Writer
      • Josh Fox
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    7.611.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7artemis-23

    I'm not an expert, but this was a good film

    I learned a lot watching this movie. I guess I thought gas just came out of the ground without much effort -- kind of like farts! But no. Lots of chemicals involved, lots of semi trucks and a true raping of the land with horrific byproducts for the nearby residents to breathe, drink and live (and die) with. Makes me want to get off natural gas altogether. Or at least drastically limit my use.

    This was a informative, well done documentary. Not nearly as much overt sarcasm as Michael Moore, lots of information (on the screen, in print people!) and a bit of irony and humor to sweeten the swallowing of such disturbing information. This was an important piece of film. Everyone in America who uses natural gas to heat their home, hot water heater, range or grill should see this.
    7view_and_review

    Frick n' Frack

    I've watched many documentaries and I've appreciated almost all of them. They are usually wake up calls to the public. They inform people, like myself, of harms or dangers we were not aware of. A good documentarian will be that thorn in the side of governments, corporations, or otherwise as they dig and dig to uncover the hidden truth.

    Josh Fox wanted to do that here. He wanted to uncover the truth about hydraulic fracturing aka fracking for natural gas. Fracking is a process of drilling and using a high pressure chemical water mixture to release natural gas from where it's deposited in the Earth's crust. The energy companies claim that fracking has no negative impact upon water sources, about a few dozen people that Josh spoke to will say differently. He showed brown water, yellow water, and water that was flammable--yes! Flammable. All of the water came from the wells or drinking sources for regular folks.

    The material of "Gasland" was excellent. The narration of the documentary was not. Josh's low, barely audible, monotone voice didn't exactly make one's ears perk up in attention. Perhaps he should've borrowed from the Michael Moore style of lively comedic sarcasm to keep the audience awake. It's clear that Josh was a novice at this documentary thing, so I'll give him a pass.
    8AJ4F

    Keep voting Republican if you want to see more of these films

    Throughout this documentary I kept thinking about the endless whining Republicans engage in when they're asked to protect the environment, as if money is vastly more important than anything that's ever existed on the Earth.

    These pollution scenarios can be laid at the feet of the Bushes, Cheneys, Limbaughs, Becks, Hannitys, Palins, Blankenships and other greediots who treat nature like a dumping ground, often citing "God's plan" as an excuse. How do people get so sick in the head that they think money is more important than life itself? These are the same parasites who keep claiming that global warming is a hoax, or the ozone hole was never a problem. Will we ever get that garbage out of the human gene pool?

    The message in this film is a powerful one, and goes well beyond the specific issue of "fracking" to cover any enterprise that disturbs nature on a large scale. The sheer footprint of drilling operations on the physical landscape is another depressing angle, almost as bad as the water and air pollution. You can easily see these rigs and access roads in satellite photos. The rapidity of their deployment is changing the map daily. Thanks, Bush & Cheney for your "wise use" loopholes that may never be fully closed.

    The human flood seems destined to grow until it consumes every possible acre that can satiate gluttony (temporarily). Wind turbines are no exception, even though they wear a "green" mantle. Future plans for endless construction will turn non-industrialized acreage into an old curiosity. That's "progress" by the standard growthist definition. Leave no "productive" land untouched. I can see national parks being ringed by the sights and odors of drilling rigs, leaving no real place to escape to. It's already encroaching on the Tetons.

    The only weakness of this documentary was the shaky, often poorly focused camera work, though it worked to exaggerate the grim mood and some of it seemed intentional. Pro cameraman or not, Mr. Fox had guts in making this piece and is to be highly commended.

    Still, I was left with the sick feeling that legislation will never fully decontaminate these activities because so many people are basically evil.
    8gbacquet

    You'll need a strong constitution...

    This documentary shows how corporate greed, without any concern for anything other than making a profit, is destroying one of the most beautiful landscapes in the world: the United States.

    As another reviewer said, it's not about gas as in gasoline, but about how oil and gas companies are polluting the environment through a process called hydraulic fracturing, used in the extraction of natural gas.

    The film is filled with unmistakable and undeniable evidence that this process is in fact forever altering not only the landscape in several states, but also their wild life as well as the health of regular individuals permanently. The images and testimonies shown will blow you away and you'll come out with a very different awareness level on what it means to be "enviromentally conscious".

    I found it really gut-wrenching and I guarantee you you won't be able to get through to the end of it without wanting to go and do something about it.

    We've seen in a number of different films how powerful industries will do anything to protect their interests and keep people quiet about their lies and methods for keeping the general public deceived about what they really do. What's really striking here is that is happening for real, in congress, and not in a movie.

    The other aspect I found really positive is that the filmmaker tried hard to remain as objective as possible, which is more than I can say about any Michael Moore documentary.Everyone is given a chance to tell their part of the story and the audience is left to decide what to make of everything being said and shown.

    I highly recommend it. You'll need a strong constitution to get through it; it's not for the faint of heart. But it'll be a very rewarding experience and hopefully one that will make you cringe every time you see a gas drill across your front yard.
    9ihrtfilms

    Startling, shocking and terrifying.

    This is perhaps one of the most shocking and disturbing films I've seen and the fact that it's all real is even more terrifying. The film follows Josh Fox who has been offered a vast amount of money by those who wish to drill on his land for natural gas. Concerned about the after effect he goes in search of some details.

    What he finds is so utterly disturbing and sad and that being huge amounts of people whose health and welfare have been effected by natural gas drilling in their back yard. The industry is enormous and the amount of gas sites are in the hundreds of thousands some are even on 'public land'. People across much of the central USA have them in their back yards, tanks, drills, containers and various other pieces of industry, small to some comparison but still a blot on the landscape. But aesthetics are far from the worse of concerns.

    The drilling for gas creates water contamination with a huge cocktail of chemicals seeping into drinking wells, streams and lakes. What was for years safe, whole areas are so full of chemical concoctions that in some instances if you hold a lit flame to a water source it erupts into flames. People have become sick due to the high quantities of dangerous and hazardous chemicals, pets and farm animals lose their hair and yet the companies involved do tests and say the water is safe to drink.

    Watching these people is distressing, living on the land, with generations of history they are now powerless to do anything as the companies refuse to acknowledge the issue. They would also unlikely to sell up as no-one would buy a property with a great big well in the back yard, let alone if they knew the issues that come with it. That the US government, thanks to Dick Cheney, signed a law that made the companies exempt from the Clean Water Bill among others is shocking, had it been otherwise, this may not be happening.

    There is some powerful stuff in this: the list of trucks it takes to actually make a natural gas well or the list of long complex chemical compounds used and found. There is the third generations farmer who is at a loss of what to do seeing the land around him change in the worse way possible. It is relentless, with person after person speaking about the effects, illness's, chemical clouds, explosions in the middles of the night and more that they now suffer. Independent tests show that water samples are so full of chemicals or that air samples are so dangerously over the recommended levels it's hard to imagine the ongoing consequences.

    The film does at last show a glimmer of hope that being a small selection of activists and politicians making a stand and trying to stop what has happened in many parts of the US happening in those untouched. Near the end we see a congressional hearing in which some of the big companies spokespeople are brought down in a few simple questions, their denial that there is a risk, blatant lies which are not received well.

    There is mention that despite the US setting there is relevance to Australia, indeed world wide. You can only hope that more people will see this film. My only gripe is the camera work, which at times is so bad, it's like a 5yr old was operating the camera. Otherwise this is powerful, shocking and moving stuff.

    More of my review at my site iheartfilms.weebly.com

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in The 83rd Annual Academy Awards (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Nirvana
      from 'Paradiso'

      Written by Jacob Ter Veldhuis

      Performed by Jacob Ter Veldhuis (as Jacob TV)

      Published By Songs of Peer, Ltd. on behalf of Music Center, The Netherlands

      Courtesy of Chandos Records, Ltd.

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    FAQ

    • How long is GasLand?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 6, 2011 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • 天然氣的秘密
    • Filming locations
      • Milanville, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production companies
      • International WOW Company
      • HBO Documentary Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $30,846
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,641
      • Sep 19, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $49,428
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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