Fuel (film): Difference between revisions
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* 2008 Santa Cruz Film Festival - Producer's Award |
* 2008 Santa Cruz Film Festival - Producer's Award |
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* 2008 Gaia Film Festival Winner - Audience Award, Best Documentary |
* 2008 Gaia Film Festival Winner - Audience Award, Best Documentary |
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==Inaccuracies== |
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* The film implies Henry Ford intended the American automotive industry to run on alcohol based fuels. The film further claims that Standard Oil backed the [[Prohibition in the United States]] in order to eliminate alcohol as a fuel and that the Prohibition eliminated alcohol as an automotive fuel. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 22:11, 3 June 2009
Fields of Fuel | |
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Directed by | Josh Tickell |
Written by | Johnny O'Hara Josh Tickell |
Produced by | Greg Reitman Dale Rosenbloom Daniel Assael Robbie Little |
Starring | Josh Tickell |
Cinematography | James Mulryan |
Edited by | Tina Imahara Michael Horwitz |
Music by | Mike Meeker Ryan Demaree |
Running time | 90 min |
Country | U.S.A. |
Language | English |
The movie Fuel, previously called, Fields of Fuel is a 2008 documentary film directed by Josh Tickell.
Fuel won the audience award at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival.[1]
From the Sundance synopsis:
Most Americans know we’ve got a problem: an addiction to oil that taxes the environment, entangles us in costly foreign policies, and threatens the nation’s long-term stability. But few are informed or empowered enough to do much about it. Enter Josh Tickell, an expert young activist who, driven by his own emotionally charged motives, shuttles us on a revelatory, whirlwind journey to unravel this addiction—from its historical origins to political constructs that support it, to alternatives available now and the steps we can take to change things.
Editing
According to director Josh Tickell, since Sundance, the film has gone through major editing changes and additions. The name was changed from Fields of Fuel to Fuel. This edited film and is a re-cut of the same film with 45 minutes of new material in its total 100 minute running time.[2]
Awards
- 2008 Sundance Film Festival Winner - Audience Award
- 2008 AFI Dallas Film Festival Winner - Current Energy Earth Friendly Award
- 2008 Sedona Film Festival Winner - Most Compelling Documentary
- 2008 Sedona Film Festival Winner - Best Screenwriting
- 2008 Santa Cruz Film Festival - Producer's Award
- 2008 Gaia Film Festival Winner - Audience Award, Best Documentary
References
- ^ "2008 Sundance Film Festival Announces Films in Competition" (PDF). 2007-11-28. Retrieved 2008-01-07.
- ^ Donner, Paige (2008). "Greening Hollywood: Liquid Gold". Huffington Post.
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