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Seeing “Dark Waters” makes you wonder not why more people don’t call corporations to account, but why anyone does. And makes us all the more grateful when they do.
“Dark Waters” focuses on how the chemical company DuPont manufactured Teflon in a West Virginia town, and in the process fouled the local drinking water with a PFAS compound.
"Dark Waters" is rated PG-13 for thematic content, some disturbing images and strong language. It's now showing in San Antonio theaters.
“Dark Waters,” in part, was based on this memoir published in October about Bilott’s jump from a career as an attorney defending chemical companies to one where he represented a West ...
Mark Ruffalo discusses "Dark Waters" with Rob Bilott, the real-life lawyer who sued DuPont after learning that the company was dumping chemicals in West Virginia and poisoning local water.
‘Dark Waters’ Team on Understanding People at Heart of Environmental Battle. The writer, director and stars of the Mark Ruffalo-led thriller talk to The Hollywood Reporter about transforming a ...
Watch Deadline's video review of 'Dark Water,' a disturbing and urgent must-see film starring Mark Ruffalo as a heroic whistleblower against Big Chem.
Dark Waters shares much with The Report, notably a long timeline. Bilott takes on DuPont in 1998 — more than a decade after the movie's foreboding prologue — and is still at work when the ...
But “Dark Waters,” with a screenplay by Mario Correa and Matthew Michael Carnahan (“Deepwater Horizon”) adapted from Nathaniel Rich’s New York Times Magazine article about Bilott, is ...
Dark Waters: Murder in the Deep has ID’s Lorna Thomas as executive producer. Greg Henry, Kim Woodard, Isaac Holub and Ifran Rahman are executive producers for Lucky 8, while Mike Sheridan and ...