Directed by Peter Berg, Deepwater Horizon dramatizes the real-life blowout of the Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico. Unlike typical Hollywood blockbusters, the film adopts a "nuts-and-bolts" docu-drama style, utilizing technical jargon and realistic depictions of offshore drilling life. It sets up a clear conflict between the rig workers—portrayed as skilled everymen—and the British Petroleum (BP) executives, who are framed as the primary architects of the disaster through their focus on cost-cutting.
The 2016 film Deepwater Horizon provides a rare and technical portrayal of an industrial catastrophe. While the film excels as a visceral disaster epic, it serves as a critical case study on how profit-driven decision-making can compromise safety protocols. This analysis examines the film's framing of the disaster through four primary lenses: managerial conflict, technology failure, worker heroism, and the omission of broader environmental and regulatory contexts. subtitle Deepwater.Horizon.2016.720p.BluRay.x26...
This paper explores the 2016 film Deepwater Horizon as a cinematic portrayal of the 2010 industrial disaster, analyzing how it frames complex themes of corporate negligence, industrial safety culture, and environmental impact. Directed by Peter Berg, Deepwater Horizon dramatizes the