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DESERVES TO BE ON DVD, TALE OF AN AMERICAN INVENTOR
This is the type of film that should be shown to students of history and political science. David Mamet is one of America's better screen writers/directors of the smaller, independant film. Those of you who viewed Tucker might enjoy this similar story of a man ahead of his time. The big budget film Chain Reaction with Morgan Freeman was probably inspired from this gem of a movie.
William Macy does a good job as a man of dreams/visions who comes up with the ideal engine run on a cheap power source, H 2 O. His invention produces the domino effect. Big business becomes threatened and shady characters enter his life, uninvited. Oil companies don't want competition. This thread of the story line looks like it was taken from today's headlines. Now that gas is looming at $5 dollars a gallon, what would happen if this invention came out today?
A good movie provokes thought and discussion. The Water Engine deserves to be out on DVD and gain a bigger audience. I hope some company will put this movie out soon.
[Monday, July 14, 2008]
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A Film That Holds Water
An interesting yet sad allegorical story set in the depression era by David Mamet. There is some truth simmering underneath a plausible plot. THE WATER ENGINE stars William H Macy as Charles Lang who invents an engine that runs entirely on water. When he tries to get get backers to help him patent the engine, he finds himself in a web of deceit,threats, betrayal and murder. There is no happy ending in this film because the minute he tries to reveal his invention, everything snowballs to less than positve results. Any help Lang tries to obtain, there seems to be a network of law enforcement to media (i.e. newspapers) that can't or won't help him. The point to the story is obvious as the power of the oil and auto industry are entities not to be reckoned with and that sometimes (or most of the time) the little man will lose to the big corporations.
[Monday, October 04, 2004]
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A fine little movie based on a play by David Mamet. It maybe gets a little carried away with itself towards the end, and suffers from its "made for television" aesthetic, but it's still well-performed, gripping, and dark.
[Monday, November 01, 1999]
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