Gas-Fieber is a documentary that explores the economic and political impacts of hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, in Pennsylvania. The film examines the controversy surrounding the practice and its effects on the environment, the local communities, and the economy. It delves into the stories of farmers and residents affected by fracking, as well as the influence of big oil companies and the politics surrounding the issue. Through interviews and footage, Gas-Fieber provides a critical look at the consequences of hydraulic fracturing in Pennsylvania.
Film art as a vehicle for denounce. This time, documentary film maker Kowalski chooses the seemingly quiet Polish landscape, a land chosen for gas drilling, making a careful examination through a cautious revision of the tracks left on the fields and the sincere confessions of discontentment of the farmers who witnessed the terrifying consequences of the intervention of great international corporations in the fields of Poland. The landscape in this resource-exploited land is infested by an invisible menace. With a special interest in the gaze of the oppressed, Kowalski delivers a somehow melancholic film, revealing a declaration of love to the land and nature before they go into oblivion.
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