Who鈥檚 responsible for the largest marine oil spill of all time? If you think it鈥檚 BP, film director Margaret Brown is here to explain why you鈥檙e wrong.
Winner of this year鈥檚 SXSW Grand Jury Award for documentaries, Brown鈥檚 The Great Invisible comes five years after the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe covered the Gulf of Mexico and the surrounding beaches and wetlands with oil slick. A native of Mobile, Alabama, and a Peabody Award-winning filmmaker, Brown honors the 11 men killed, their families, surviving crewmembers, and the still-suffering locals, and tells the story that unfolded here after the major news outlets left. 鈥淚 wanted to make something that was deeper and longer,鈥 she says: 鈥淚 wanted to show: Why did this happen?鈥
The answer, according to Brown, is America鈥檚 insatiable thirst for low-cost energy. It鈥檚 easy to point fingers at the oil industry, she says. 鈥淏ut [cheap fuel] is something that we鈥檙e all asking for.鈥
The film centers on the people tasked with meeting that demand鈥攂oth in the field and in the offices of major corporations. She begins with Doug Brown, Deepwater Horizon鈥檚 chief mechanic. 鈥淲e drilled the deepest oil hole in the world,鈥 he says, giving voice to a culture thick with machismo. 鈥淚 knew my job was dangerous,鈥 he tells the filmmaker, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 why I took it.鈥
Margaret Brown shows oil traders, suited and sucking cigars, as they discuss America鈥檚 fossil fuel dependency and how renewables can鈥檛 seem to compete in a world accustomed to instant gratification. 鈥淭he sun don鈥檛 always shine and the wind don鈥檛 always blow,鈥 two traders say in unison. The pair would have been easy to caricature, but Brown manages to flesh them out鈥攁nd suggests that they shouldn't shoulder all the blame: They are simply part of a culture-wide, unending clamor for oil. After all, just five years on, BP is running its largest fleet of oil rigs in the Gulf ever. President Obama, meanwhile, is encouraging , and Shell could be drilling the Chukchi Sea by this summer.
What鈥檚 most disturbing鈥攊f not unexpected鈥攊s how the local community continues to suffer. Directly following the oil traders鈥 interview, the film cuts to Bayou La Batre, Alabama鈥檚 seafood capital. Food pantry volunteer 鈥淢r. Rosie鈥 is hosting a free spaghetti lunch for over 300 out-of-work oyster shuckers, crab pickers, and fishermen. 鈥淎ll the people around here who are hungry鈥攖hey can come get 鈥榚m a free meal on Saturday,鈥 he says, opening an oversized can of tomato sauce.
And it鈥檚 true that people have been a big part of the cleanup effort here; they by donating funds, supplies, and time. But The Great Invisible is a sharp reminder that we humans are the central mechanism of the ongoing global disaster: 鈥淲e are all part of the agreement,鈥 Brown argues, 鈥渨hether we know it or not.鈥
鈥淭he Great Invisible鈥 premieres April 20th on PBS鈥檚 Independent Lens series鈥攍earn more about the film here: