Who Killed The Electric Car? - Movie Review

  • 26 May 2006

Rating: 2 out of 5

According to everyone, from Al Gore to Michael Moore to Oliver Stone, in the not so distant future, we're all going to bear witness to a mighty big shit storm (academics have adorably nicknamed this happening "the Apocalypse"). Thusly, everyone from your grandmother to the brother of the guy who directed Capturing the Friedmans is working on a documentary to pinpoint what exactly will be the cause of this shit storm. At last we left it, Al Gore and Davis Guggenheim were telling us that it will be good ol' Mother Nature who finally exacts much-needed revenge on us in An Inconvenient Truth. Chris Paine adds a footnote to that story with Who Killed the Electric Car?

In the '90s, there was a brief moment where it looked like all these oil concerns could be alleviated. Many of the most prominent car companies had designed a car that, much like a cell phone, could simply be plugged in at night and would be ready to drive to and from work when you got up. However, most of these cars never saw the light of day and those that did were quickly called back, even ones that were given to celebrities like Tom Hanks and Mel Gibson. The film presupposes that this was a conspiracy concocted by the oil companies, the government, and the car companies to keep us all sucking at the slick-black oil teat. A good case is made in the film, but it's not really delivered with enough conviction or backing.

How did Paine allow crazy Mel Gibson to run away with the film? The most engaging parts of the film are watching Gibson yammering on about how much he loved his electric car. Besides these brief moments, the film is left to stand alone on its educated legs, devoid of charm or real humor. Expect to see eyes roll when an engineer who worked on the EV1 (Electric Vehicle 1) goes to a car museum and pets the last electric car that hasn't been brought in for destruction. Even worse, Paine stages an actual funeral for the damn car, in some peculiar stab to amp up a satirical edge. The information, as stated before, makes a good case that this was a money-over-the-greater-good conspiracy. But where An Inconvenient Truth has the information and a bewilderingly-charming Al Gore to supply reasons, Who Killed the Electric Car? has no focus or reason apart from its history lesson.

Electric Car brings up an interesting idea that it might not have intended to do: Is there any surprise that the oil companies would pull something like this? It's hard to refute that the oil companies are willing to do just about anything to keep the money rolling in along with the black gold. So, why try to bill a film like this as an "important" film? It doesn't bring up anything supremely new or surprising to merit attention, nor does it have even half the entertainment that the Hybrid episode of South Park had. What it does have is a ticket into the much overpopulated current culture of conspiracy, where anyone with a secret document or a hushed correspondence can make a 90-minute film and feel like they are Woodward and Bernstein. They're not, and, to no surprise, the shit storm is still looming in the distance.

Reviewed as part of the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.

Who Killed the Electric Car?
Image caption Who Killed the Electric Car?

Facts and Figures

Year: 2006

In Theaters: Friday 4th August 2006

Box Office USA: $1.3M

Distributed by: Sony Pictures Classics

Production compaines: Plinyminor, Electric Entertainment, Papercut Films

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 2 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Fresh: 92 Rotten: 12

IMDB: 7.7 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Chris Paine

Producer: Jessie Deeter

Screenwriter: Chris Paine

Starring: Martin Sheen as Narrator, Mel Gibson as Himself, Tom Hanks as Himself

Also starring: Alexandra Paul