Promised Land (2012) ⢠View trailer
Four stars. Rating: R, for profanity
By Derrick Bang ⢠Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 1.9.13
Matt Damon hasnât written many scripts since 1997âs Good Will Hunting, his Academy Award-winning debut effort with Ben Affleck. His prudence is understandable; where does one go, from up?
![]() |
Hoping to undo the doubts raised by a local farmer who warns that fracking is anything but a safe means of obtaining "clean" natural gas, Steve Butler (Matt Damon) takes the microphone during a McKinley town meeting. Unfortunately, his usual smooth patter will fail him a bit here, leading to a divided community ... and displeasure on the part of Steve's corporate bosses. |
Good Will Hunting was directed by Gus Van Sant; no surprise, then, that they collaborated on Damonâs next script, 2002âs little-seen (with good cause) Gerry.
Perhaps chastened by that experience, Damon put his word processor in the closet for a decade, while crafting an impressive acting career as both action hero â" the Bourne series â" and overall international film star.
But writers never quit; telling stories is in their blood. No doubt Damon was waiting for just the right property, and he certainly got it with Promised Land. Once again under Van Santâs capable guidance, this captivating drama gets its juice from well-crafted characters, tart dialogue, a solid ensemble cast and a hot-button scenario ripped from real-world headlines.
Damon shares scripting duties with John Krasinski, a rising film star making good on the promise he has shown for so many years, on televisionâs The Office. Krasinski isnât known as a writer â" unless once includes 2009âs best-forgotten Brief Interviews with Hideous Men â" but he certainly rises to the occasion here. He and Damon have deftly adapted a story by Dave Eggers, who burst on the scene a few years ago, with scripts for Away We Go and Where the Wild Things Are.
Good screenplays get their power from many elements. Itâs not enough to craft piquant one-liners; they must be true to a well constructed plot. (They also must be delivered well by actors who understand how to maximize the impact of crisply timed dialogue, and thatâs where we credit Van Sant.) The characters themselves must be interesting, efficiently sketched and cleverly integrated with all the other players on stage. We must care about them, either as good guys or bad guys.
Most of all, they must change â" mature, regress, whatever â" as a result of what happens to them.
A tall order all around.
Factor in a desire to be relevant â" to indict a topic of the day â" and most writers fail to juggle all those fragile eggs.
Damon and Krasinski, in welcome contrast, never err. Even casual exchanges of dialogue have consequences; watch for the payoff on a passing reference to a little girl selling lemonade outside a high school gymnasium. Goodness, it could be argued that she carries the moral weight of the entire film. That is sharp scripting.
Damon and Frances McDormand star as Steve Butler and Sue Thomason, seasoned corporate âhandlersâ for a multi-billion-dollar energy titan dubbed Global Crosspower Solutions. Steve and Sue are sent into distressed small towns in order to persuade cash-strapped residents to lease the drilling rights of their farms.
Steve and Sue have built a reputation for sealing deals rapidly, and with contracts far less expensive â" which is to say, less generous to townsfolk â" than other Global teams. The pitch is a well-honed blend of smooth talk, vague promises, tantalizing references to additional financial windfalls for the owners of âwell-placedâ farms ... and the occasional bribe, of necessity.
They make a great team: Steve is a sympathetic former farm boy who watched his own home town dry up and blow away when the only local industry closed; Sue is a dedicated soccer mom who advocates the value of the superior schools that can be built with the leasing payments.
Left unspoken â" but certainly known to these advance scouts, and equally obvious to us â" is the fact that ground never will be broken on such schools, because every cent will be devoured by the financial institutions propping up everybodyâs over-mortgaged farmland.
Left unspoken, as well, is the fact that the natural gas which Global desires â" the resource repeatedly championed by Steve and Sue as âclean energyâ â" will be extracted from the shale rock beneath everybodyâs farm via hydraulic fracturing, or âfrackingâ (a word theyâre careful to avoid).
The story begins as Steve and Sue land in McKinley, a small farmland community in a never-specified state. (Van Sant shot the film in western Pennsylvania.) That detail doesnât matter; the American heartland â" and the West Coast â" are laden with such towns. The Global raiders (letâs call a spade a spade) expect a slam-dunk like all the others; McKinley is economically distressed, its many farmers clinging by their fingernails to property that has been in their families for generations.
But something unexpected happens this time: a stirring of pride, wariness ... and bad timing. Local high school science teacher Frank Yates (Hal Holbrook) leads the resistance, and he finds it easy to stall the Global engine; fracking has become the evil term du jour, and the Internet is laden with well-documented stories of farmland turned poisonous by the chemical brew employed during the process. Globalâs behavior, so smoothly kept under the radar until now, is being dragged into unforgiving sunlight like a vampire hauled from its coffin.
Although Steve and Sue already have numerous signatures on contracts, having preyed on local anxiety, this apparent victory morphs into a mirage when Yates encourages his McKinley neighbors to delay their collective decision, pending a vote. In three weeks.
Needless to say, Global isnât happy about the delay. Adding to Steveâs agitation, he assumes â" quite rightly â" that his long-awaited promotion will evaporate just as rapidly, should McKinley take itself out of play.
To make matters even worse, another newcomer blows into town: Dustin Noble (Krasinski), a slick environmental activist bearing ghastly photos of dead cows and stories of tainted water supplies.
What shapes into a massive battle for McKinleyâs soul unfolds subtly, almost delicately, via small encounters. We get the first skirmish quickly, as Steve and Sue stock up on âlocal dudsâ at a general store displaying a sign that advertises âGas, Groceries, Guns and Guitars.â We canât help chuckling, more so as McDormandâs tart-tongued Sue mocks the place; we share her sense of superiority.
The chuckles die seconds later, once we meet the storeâs owner â" Titus Welliver, as Rob â" an obviously intelligent, if pragmatic fellow who isnât about to tolerate smugness from big-city invaders ... particularly those with an agenda. And yet Rob isnât âthe enemy,â particularly when he takes a shine to Sue. Welliverâs carefully nuanced Rob is but the first of the many McKinley citizens who defy expectations: ours, and Steveâs.
Holbrookâs Frank Yates is another example. Although clearly hostile to Globalâs slick steamroller approach, he doesnât blame Steve and Sue per se; indeed, he could use the money as much as anybody else. Frank merely voices the doubts that need to be raised: Is the tantalizing short-term offer of cash in hand worth the long-term risk of seeing oneâs heritage destroyed ... individually, locally and nationally?
Corporations are notorious for having no soul; any appeals to conscience must be made to foot-soldiers such as Steve and Sue.
Holbrook delivers a finely shaded performance worthy of a Norman Rockwell painting, but with a modern twist: Frank Yates isnât merely a veteran farm owner, heâs also a highly respected former scientist filling his retirement years as a school teacher. We ache upon hearing his own personal âsolutionâ to the Hobsonâs Choice being offered by Global.
Rosemarie DeWitt shines as Alice, an effervescent grade school teacher who catches Steveâs eye â" and vice versa â" until getting distracted by the far more boisterously charming Dustin.
Lucas Black also makes a strong impression as a naïve and gullible young farmer who swallows Steveâs patter â" hook, line and sinker â" and then buys an expensive new sports car on the âpromiseâ of money to come. Itâs a heartbreaking moment made even more powerful by Blackâs trusting gaze.
McDormandâs dry delivery is a hoot, her critical sidelong glances to die for. Weâre never quite sure whether Sue actually has a heart; she clearly plays a role in public, surrounding by McKinley residents, yet she also keeps in loving touch with her son, via Skype, when concealed behind the closed door of her motel room. The truth undoubtedly resides in her view that, at the end of each day, what she and Steve do is a job. Just a job.
Krasinskiâs Dustin is a force of nature: a seductive, silver-tongued emissary who hearkens back to the glib, glad-handing antics of Robert Preston, in The Music Man. Despite being an outgunned underdog, Dustin instinctively understands how best to reach these people, thanks to a cocksure attitude that infuriates Steve more with each passing day.
Despite the overwhelming odds, Dustin is so sure of himself â" Krasinski makes him so dedicated, so earnest â" that we canât help cheering his every small success.
But thatâs the question, of course: Even if Dustin succeeds, is that good news for McKinley? Truly? Even on a national scale, are the risks of fracking worse than our continued reliance on coal and oil, both of which have their own serious drawbacks?
Although the nominal star, Damon generously shares the spotlight with all his fellow actors. His handling of Steve is another in a recent line of ethically challenged businessmen in the mold of George Clooneyâs Ryan Bingham, from 2009âs Up in the Air: guys who, push come to shove, may not be quite as callous as theyâd like to believe.
Damon has numerous standout scenes, both kind and ruthless. Best of the latter comes during a brutally frank conversation with a local civic leader (Ken Strunk) who seeks financial âincentiveâ to persuade his town to accept Globalâs offer. Alternatively, Damon turns playful during his flirtatious encounters with DeWittâs Alice, their verbal sparring genuinely cute.
âIâm not a bad guy,â he tells her repeatedly, and we begin to wonder whether heâs trying to persuade her ... or himself.
Its merits as a well-crafted drama notwithstanding, this film has become a lightning rod for its unapologetically critical assault on fracking. Pundits and even some critics are âreviewingâ only the message, with a predictable divide between red and blue states, liberals and conservatives. The outrage expressed by the Marcellus Shale Coalition, as just one example, is so laughably strident that it strays into âThe lady doth protest too muchâ territory.
No question: This is advocacy cinema. That said, I remain impressed by a compelling work of art that entertains while encouraging debate on a topic that, yes, could use a helluva lot more exposure.
0 comments:
Post a Comment