
Film SynopsisA documentary that investigates the birth and death of the electric car, as well as the role of renewable energy and sustainable living in the future. Get Involved |
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Runtime:
92 min.
Genre:
Documentary
Country:
UNITED STATES
Language:
English/American
Color:
Color
Certification:
PG
Tagline
In 1996, electric cars began to appear on roads all over California. They were quiet and fast, produced no exhaust and ran without gasoline...........Ten years later, these cars were destroyed.
Plot Summary
In the 1990s, following California’s passing of the Zero Emission Vehicle mandate, American car companies began producing electric cars for mainstream consumption. GM’s EV1, which was by all accounts quiet, fast, and capable of driving up to 80 miles on one charge, used no gasoline and quickly developed an intensely devoted following in California. But even as its popularity grew, car manufacturers were fighting the mandate; it was overturned, and by 2005 just about every single EV1 had been recalled, crushed, and shredded. GM put its resources into the Hummer instead. WHO KILLED THE ELECTRIC CAR? looks at the tangled web of interests behind the car’s untimely demise, laying out convincing cases against the auto industry, big oil, corrupt federal and state governments, and consumers themselves. Chris Paine’s directorial debut is not especially stylish, but it is effective. He leads viewers through the twisty maze of politics and profit that surrounds the main story, taking time to dwell on the passionate attachment that many of the cars’ drivers still feel for them. Appropriately, the film is narrated by Martin Sheen--the embodiment for many Americans of socially conscious leadership, thanks to his many years on THE WEST WING--and features interviews with a motley array of celebrities from Mel Gibson to Ed Begley, Jr., but the real star of the movie is the doomed car itself and all that it stands for. The film is not especially fair or balanced; very little screen time is devoted to criticism of electric cars, and the only person on camera defending the oil companies is a singularly slimy and unappealing spokesperson from whom most viewers would be unwilling to buy a used car of any variety. But it certainly succeeds as a rousing, if occasionally depressing, call to awareness and action.
FEATURES:
Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen -
1.78
Audio:
Dolby Digital Surround Sound 5.1 - English
Subtitles - French - Optional
Closed Captioned - English - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Featurettes -
1. Deleted Scenes (12)
2. "Jump-Starting the Future" - Documentary
3. Music Video - Meeky Rosie - "Forever"
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Directed by
Chris Paine
Produced by
Dean Devlin
Writing credits
Chris Paine
Cast
| Martin Sheen | ||
| Reverend Gadget | ||
| Dave Barthmuss | ||
| Ed Begley Jr. | ||
| Mel Gibson |
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