In Our Water (1982)

In Our Water (1982)

A riveting, true account of a ragtag groups of citizens organizing against their negligent government

7.7

Movie

United States
English
Documentary
1982
FEMALE DIRECTOR, MEG SWITZGABLE
61 min

TLDR

Everyone gangster until the weird neighbor down the road turns out to be a badass Holocaust survivor.

What it's about

New Jersey housepainter Frank Kaler rallies together a group of people to protest their local government unit when it's discovered that a landfill has been poisoning their drinking water.

The take

You know that the people you choose to follow for a documentary are great characters when the film itself can survive as straightforward coverage of their actions, no fancy directorial flourishes needed. But this is not to downplay what director Meg Switzgable does. In fact, her dedication to sticking by Frank Kaler and the other citizens of South Brunswick on the ground—and therefore capturing them as three-dimensional, inspirational human beings—is arguably the core value that all documentarians should possess. This also means that the access Switzgable has to this issue of government negligence is obstructed by the same red tape Kaler encounters, making the film (already just an hour long) feel too short. Still, a modest documentary like this shouldn't feel this thrilling. And by the end, all these New Jersey residents look like rock stars.

What stands out

The most inspiring truth that sets the film in motion is the idea that community organizing and protesting—one's radicalization, in other words—rarely begins as something rooted in some specific ideology. Kaler and his neighbors aren't "woke," whatever that really means, as if that were inherently a bad thing. Every ordinary person is capable of perceiving something wrong with their environment or the way things are handled by their elected officials, but what sets Kaler apart is simply his belief that raising his voice can, in fact, lead to change. If a humble housepainter in New Jersey can do it, what excuse do the rest of us have?

Comments

Add a comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Spermworld (2024)

People take family planning into their own hands in this fascinating look into sperm donation online

7.3

White God (2014)

An unpleasant, bizarre, yet brilliant drama about the dark side of man and his best friend

7.3

How to Have Sex (2023)

A drunken summer vacation turns melancholy in this sober observation of teenage rites of passage

7.7

Falling in Love Like in Movies (2023)

A contemplative Indonesian romance film that rewrites and re-examines the genre’s conventions

8.4

Bray Wyatt: Becoming Immortal (2024)

WWE’s best effort to pay tribute to Windham “Bray Wyatt” Rotunda

8.5

Leave the World Behind (2023)

Shyamalan meets Black Mirror in this hugely entertaining, visually inventive apocalyptic thriller with a killer ending

8.2

River (2023)

A delightful and ultimately life-affirming Japanese time loop comedy clearly made with love

8.8

Hail Satan? (2019)

Forget everything you think you know about the Satanic Temple

8.0

I Lost My Body (2019)

The Oscar-nominated unconventional animation

8.2

Wind River (2017)

Sicario's screenwriter directs this story of murder in an Indigenous reserve

9.4

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.