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Having grown up in rural Iowa, where his grandfather owned a farm, Steve knows first-hand the struggle of farmers, so sees no issues with his mission at first. All the arguments from \"can't survive on federal farm subsidies\" to \"it will fund the rising cost of a college education\" are included in the sales pitch and made in quick succession. As in real life, heated debates among the area residents ensue. The farmers, who are struggling financially, are tempted to take the badly needed monies to make ends meet. Yet Frank Yates (Hal Holbrook), a science teacher at the local high school, expresses concerns at a town meeting about the long-term effects of hydraulic fracturing on the region, its soil, water, and air, and consequently on livestock and residents' health. And then Dustin Noble (John Krasinski), an environmentalist, arrives in town, expressing just these and other concerns, too. Who will pay for the clean up that might be needed, once the resources are depleted and the company moves on? The company? The state? The local coffers? Who will pay for any adverse effects on health that might be incurred? Who will replace the lost jobs that the boom and bust economic wave might unleash? A one-man organizer, he goes farm to farm, talking to the residents and putting up signs in their front lawns that read \"Global Go Home\" and are adorned with images of dead cows. Promised Land complicates what could be a simplistically rendered battle between outside salesmen seeking to profit from struggling local farmers by presenting the fissures within each group: the differing opinions among the farmers about the best course of action, and the increasingly conflicted viewpoint of Steve Butler. The film portrays the increasingly bleak economic prospects in the rural U.S., which Steve, increasingly frustrated with the resident's skepticism, depicts at the local bar, Buddy's Place: \"You think about how much you made on your best day ... and then you think real hard about much you made on your worst. Cuz let's be real honest with each other, they're all starting to look like that more and more, aren't they? These people? This town? This life? It's dying and damn near dead.\" In Promised Land, the decision about whether or not to allow fracking is ultimately brought to the town for a vote. Debate exists about whether hydraulic fracturing should be regulated at the federal, state, or local level. To date, numerous towns and cities nation-wide have passed local bans. Both New York and Maryland have suspended fracking, in order to assess its environmental and health impacts. New York City has stated that hydraulic fracturing's risks are too great to risk contaminating the drinking water of its 8.5 million residents. Unfortunately, the film leaves Steve's moral education up to local high school teacher Alice (Rosemate DeWitt) and science teacher Frank, who used to be a scientist. Alice once lived in Manhattan but moved back to her grandfather's farm because when it came time to give up the property, she \"did not want to be that person.\" Now, she brings students to visit the garden in the backyard, so that they \"learn how to take care of things.\" It's a line she gives Steve when he first tours the yard and one he cites during his last speech. The implicit narrative: Leave it to the women and elderly to be the moral compass that (may) educate men and have them realize a sense of ethics. (And teachers are mainly people who have been successful elsewhere rather than choosing the profession for its own merits.) Yawn. Also disconcerting is the fact that the environmentalist comes from outside the community rather than from within the community. This distorts the broad base and local roots of the anti-fracking movement. The cliched depictions of non-urban spaces as all alike also smack of bi-coastal unfamiliarity and may rub audiences the wrong way. The film quips \"two hours outside any city looks like Kentucky.\" In fact, as anyone who has ever driven through Kentucky and Pennsylvania knows, the two are not the same, in vegetation, in people's demeanor, or in shale deposits. Promised Land contains superb acting and beautifully shot landscapes, but unfortunately it offers a rather superficial take on fracking and cliched images of rural residents. The film opened in select cities on Friday, December 28, making it an Oscar contender, and opens nationwide on January 4, 2013. To find a theater near you: https://focusfeatures.com/promised_land","author":{"@type":"Person","description":"Tina Gerhardt is an environmental journalist who covers international climate change negotiations, domestic and state energy policy and sea level rise. Her writing has been published in Common Dreams, Grist, The Nation, The Progressive, Sierra Magazine, and Washington Monthly. Her latest book is Sea Change: An Atlas of Islands in a Rising Ocean (University of California Press, 2023).","identifier":"25380539","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://www.commondreams.org/media-library/eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpbWFnZSI6Imh0dHBzOi8vYXNzZXRzLnJibC5tcy8zMTk4NzA0OS9vcmlnaW4uanBnIiwiZXhwaXJlc19hdCI6MTc5Mjc4NDc4NX0.AXB_PDknImGYD-LxJGn7gUwb3_MIPqbtkkqmolKuotk/image.jpg?width=210"},"name":"tina-gerhardt","url":"https://www.commondreams.org/author/tina-gerhardt"},"dateModified":"2022-12-22T03:50:21Z","datePublished":"2013-01-01T05:50:32Z","description":"","headline":"Matt Damon Exposes Fracking in Promised Land","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":"600","representativeOfPage":"True","url":"","width":"1200"},"isAccessibleForFree":"True","mainEntityOfPage":"https://www.commondreams.org/views/2013/01/01/matt-damon-exposes-fracking-promised-land","publisher":{"@id":"https://www.commondreams.org/","@type":"Organization","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":"511","url":"https://assets.rbl.ms/32373543/origin.png","width":"1501"},"name":"Common Dreams","sameAs":["https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Dreams","https://www.facebook.com/commondreams.org","https://twitter.com/commondreams"],"url":"https://www.commondreams.org/"},"speakable":{"@type":"SpeakableSpecification","cssSelector":["h1",".widget__subheadline",".social-author",".body-description"]}},{"@id":"https://www.commondreams.org/","@type":"Organization","address":{"@type":"PostalAddress","addressCountry":"USA","addressLocality":"Portland","addressRegion":"Maine","postalCode":"04112","streetAddress":"PO Box 443"},"alternateName":"CommonDreams.org","contactPoint":{"@type":"ContactPoint","availableLanguage":"English","email":"info@commondreams.org","telephone":"+1-207-775-0488","url":"https://www.commondreams.org"},"ethicsPolicy":"https://www.commondreams.org/ethics-policy","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":"511","representativeOfPage":"True","url":"https://assets.rbl.ms/32373543/origin.png","width":"1501"},"name":"Common Dreams","nonprofitStatus":"Nonprofit501c3","publishingPrinciples":"https://www.commondreams.org/publishing-principles","sameAs":["https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Dreams","https://www.loc.gov/item/lcwaN0010146/","https://www.facebook.com/commondreams.org","https://twitter.com/commondreams","https://www.instagram.com/commondreams/"],"telephone":"207-775-0488","url":"https://www.commondreams.org/"}]}
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