By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (3 March 2020)
Dark
Waters is a legal thriller
that came out late last year based on a true story about a corporate defense attorney
who risks his career and potentially even his life when he turns into an
environmental activist who fights for the little guy who’s been grossly
aggrieved by one of his law firm’s biggest corporate clients, DuPont Chemical.
Mark Ruffalo
may be best known among ‘Avenger’ fans as the Hulk. They might be doubtful how
he could play a big-time corporate lawyer. But in a way, Ruffalo’s character in
Dark Waters, Rob Bilott is also angered by the injustice he’s compelled to see
when a childhood neighbor from West Virginia comes looking for him to show him
why the farmer needs Bilott’s help. And like the Hulk, he takes on the ‘impossible’
tasks of fighting the injustice by defending the little guy who’s been
virtually bankrupted by DuPont’s careless poisoning of farmer’s herd of 190 cows.
Born and
raised in the backwaters of West Virginia, Bilott had made his family and neighbors
proud of his success as a legal defender of rich and powerful corporations like
DuPont. But once he’d been shown to way DuPont had knowingly released poisonous
chemicals into the ground water systems around their factories, he (like Hulk)
got really mad.
His wife Sarah
(played with surprising sensitivity and maturity by Anne Hathaway) is initially
opposed to what quickly becomes her husband’s obsession, seeking environmental
and social justice for the humble farmer (played brilliantly by Bill Camp).
But in spite
of her fears, seeing her husband’s life threatened as he gets closer to unearthing
the truth about DuPont’s criminal role in destroyed a whole water system and
livelihood for an entire community, she stands by him.
Even his law
firm sticks with him, despite his struggle to obtain justice for his childhood
friend and neighbor taking several years to achieve.
The film might
sound rather dry and dull, especially as Bilott takes years reading through the
many law suits against DuPont that the corporate giant invariably overturned (since
they had the means to hire the sharpest lawyers that money could buy).
But ‘Dark
Waters’ is real David and Goliath-like thriller based on Bilott’s true story,
which was written up in 2016 as a New York Times magazine piece by Nathaniel
Rich and called ‘The Lawyer who became DuPont’s Worst Nightmare.’
In real
life, Ruffalo is the one who really championed this film. He first read the
story in New York Times and felt passionate about running with it as far as he
could take it.
He then took
it to the film’s future director, the independent American filmmaker Todd
Haynes whom he persuaded to direct. Ruffalo and Haynes then got Mario Correa and
Matthew Michael Carnahan to write the screenplay which Ruffalo not only starred
in as Rob Bilott but also co-produced with Christine Vachon of Killer Films.
So while
Ruffalo may play a super-hero comic book character in Marvel’s Avengers, he’s
also a human super-hero in real life.
No comments:
Post a Comment