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Necessity: A Two-Part Documentary Series

Necessity: A Two-Part Documentary Series

When I consider the issues surrounding Climate Change, I’m constantly reminded that this very broad topic of the environmental crisis we face is made up of a myriad of smaller battles to fight. One such battle takes place in Jan Haaken’s documentary, Necessity: A Two-Part Documentary Series.

In Necessity, the bad guy is Enbridge, the largest manufacturer of pipelines for the big oil companies. Currently, Enbridge pipes transport tar sands oil from Alberta to North Dakota to, finally, Wisconsin. Tar sand is a sludge-like mixture of clay and oil, and it’s forced through the pipeline at incredibly high amounts of pressure. Leaks in these pipes send the toxic sludge into the lakes and water systems of the indigenous peoples’ land along the pipeline’s path.

In part one of Necessity, a group of protesters who dub themselves “valve-turners” broke onto private property and shut off several of the pipeline’s valves… a perilous prospect for regular folks like us to do. Having enough with these protesters, Enbridge decides to make an example of them and prosecute the valve-turners to the full extent of the law. The environmentalist lawyers step in and argue on the defense of “Necessity”—the idea that the small damage done by the defendants outweighs the great damage done by Enbridge.

In part two, the documentary follows a large group of protesters who, in the act of civil disobedience, lay down on train tracks to prevent the passage of trains transporting vast amounts of oil across the country. Their reasoning concerns the growing number of train derailments on indigenous lands that have killed people and created environmental disasters from oil spillage and out-of-control toxic fires.

What appears to be a story about climate activism, there are so many issues surrounding these two simple acts of protest that it will make your head spin. So let’s break a few down. In part one, what is set up as a simple case of forcing the oil and pipeline companies to clean up their messes becomes an indictment on the energy industry as a whole.

“…the bad guy is Enbridge, the largest manufacturer of pipelines for the big oil companies.”

The documentary then jumps into many other issues, including the centuries-long mistreatment of Native Americans and indigenous peoples, the unequal treatment of the indigenous protesters versus the white protesters, the gradual loss of Native American culture, and how unions are now starting to put their foot down on aiding and abetting Big Oil. Finally, it all ends with this multi-billion dollar game between corporate lawyers and the volunteer staff of climate activists.

Let’s be real here. Necessity is pretty one-sided in the debate…oil companies and the energy industry are bad. However, no one from Big Oil is represented either by the filmmakers’ choice or by the oil companies refusal to take part. I mention this not to take a side necessarily but to be clear that there is one audience for this documentary from a “preaching to the choir” standpoint. In other words, Necessity will appeal to those on the pro-environment side and may necessarily win over new converts…but it damn sure tries.

Politics aside, director Jan Haaken and co-director Samantha Praus tell a thrilling and dire story. Their subjects are pretty-much grassroots protestors…unsophisticated, yet passionate. Haaken does an incredible job getting their story across and spotlighting the drama they face on the ground during protests and in court. As a result, you get a clear idea of what they are fighting for and why they’ve chosen non-violent civil disobedience as their weapon.

If you are passionate about the environmental fight in the northern U.S. regarding pipelines, Necessity: A Two-Part Documentary Series was made for you. If you’re on the other side of the political divide, a documentary like this is what you need to see to challenge your current beliefs and see the issue from a different perspective.

For screening information, visit the Necessity: A Two-Part Documentary Series official website.

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