A Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash

Directed by Basil Gelpke & Ray McCormack

From Amazon.com                                                

While the previous eco-doc Who Killed the Electric Car? spent some time on the world's oil crisis, A Crude Awakening (formerly OilCrash) builds an entire film around the subject. Swiss journalist Basil Gelpke and Irish filmmaker Ray McCormack have constructed their narrative in a conventional manner, alternating between talking heads, archival footage, and modern-day material, but the addition of several pieces by Phillip Glass is an artful touch (and evokes his work on 1988's The Thin Blue Line). Throughout, a diverse array of experts from the U.S., Azerbaijan, Venezuela, and other countries explain how the 20th century became addicted to "the blood of the dinosaurs," and why contemporary society needs to change course. As attorney/activist Matthew David Savinar puts it, "Oil is our God." As Stanford professor Terry Lynn Karl adds, "More and more oil is going to come from less and less stable places...places that actually challenge the taking of oil in the first place." One of the more chilling revelations concerns the discrepancy between the reserves oil-producing nations claim they possess and the actual amount. These padded estimates allow them to drill with impunity, leading to an abundance of wealth in the short term and cataclysmic consequences once they've depleted their supply of this non-renewable resource. A Crude Awakening isn't exactly a day-brightener, but Gelpke and McCormack are comprehensive and impartial in their inquiry, which makes for an informative examination of a vitally important subject. Extras include extended interviews with four participants and bonus chapter Petrostates. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Peak Oil Resources Review:   

In some ways this film strikes a similar vein to that of "Crude Impact".  Same basic plot (oil discovery, growth, addiction, & crash) but with a presentation and cinematography that is simply smoother and more captivating.  The chorus of meltdown and eventual wars over this dwindling resource are a familiar theme to the Peak Oil aware, making this another great title that one can use to educate friends and family on this very important topic.  I found this film to be extremely well thought out and put together and it is something that everyone should see.  Chalk this one up in the must see column...