Sunday, February 19, 2012


Erin Brockovich comes into the room carrying what looks like a glass of water. On closer inspection, it turns out to be vodka and tonic. Erin Brockovich is nobody's fool.
Not that there's anything wrong with the tap water in Germany, although there could be. Brockovich is careful that way.

She won't drink the water in any community that gets it from wells - as 40 million Americans do - because it's not tested and she doesn't trust it. She doesn't like the sulphuric taste of water in Florida, so she drinks bottled water when she's there. Once, in Indonesia, she was so suspicious of the water that she brushed her teeth with beer.

Brockovich became forever associated with the issue of water pollution after the 2000 film - for which Julia Roberts won an Oscar - based on the true story of how she fought Pacific Gas and Electric for allowing dangerous chemicals into the water supply of Hinkley, Calif.

She has become the public face of public outrage. She's now working on the case of a Le Roy, N.Y., school where there is a cluster of children with unusual neurological symptoms. 

Some people think it's because of dirty well water, so someone called Brockovich. "People can't trust anybody, which is why I get so many emails," she says. "People don't know where to report information."

She is also one of the experts in the new documentary Last Call at the Oasis, which is being screened at the Berlin film festival. It's a warning about the dwindling supply of clean drinking water in the world: dry lakes, farmers in Australia killing themselves because drought has destroyed their agriculture, Las Vegas on the verge of a water emergency, and much more.

Last Call at the Oasis was produced by Participant Media, which has previously grown alarmed by the crises of global warming (An Inconvenient Truth), agriculture (Food, Inc.) and American education (Waiting for Superman). Director Jessica Yu (the Oscar-winning Breathing Lessons) talked to experts ranging from hydrologists to an expert in how a cocktail of pharmaceuticals are finding their way into the water supply.

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