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      Split Estate

      2009 1h 16m Documentary List
      Reviews 88% Audience Score Fewer than 50 Ratings Some living in the Rockies witness erosion of their civil liberties, communities and health as energy companies drill beneath their land. Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (1) Critics Reviews
      Marty Mapes Movie Habit Documentary on Colorado mineral rights earns a little outrage, and then asks for even more Rated: 2/4 Sep 28, 2010 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (3) audience reviews
      Frances H Scary as hell--and they are all over everywhere. Man is the only animal that DOES piss where he sleeps. And why is fracking allowed? Because a few already wealthy individuals who run these companies want to make even more money, so that they can buy even more expensive multi-million dollar yachts. To prove that what they say about how "harmless" fracking is, they should have to live in houses right next to wells for 10 years and drink what is left in the pools for their drinking water and bathing water for that entire period. You would see something very different happening then--the wells next to their homes shutting down. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 07/25/16 Full Review Audience Member Conico Philips comes on your property and drill with/with out your permission, they own the Mineral Rights Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/15/23 Full Review walter m "Split Estate" is a devastating documentary about an ongoing environmental catastrophe in the Rocky Mountains where 85% of the property owners do not own the mineral rights to their land which are held instead by private companies. That along with deregulation pushed by the Bush administration and lawmakers friendly to oil and gas companies(from both parties) helps to not only make their drilling for oil and natural gas without need of compensation or permission possible but also allows for it in populated areas. That would be bad enough even without the toxins emitted by the wells which poisons the ground water, along with the more spectacular fires. What the documentary does so well is to focus on those landowners most afflicted(some whose land have been in the family for generations) and allows them to tell their stories of hardship in their own words. Testimony from experts is used to contradict the energy companies who are given more than enough rope to hang themselves. It is not entirely hopeless as there are signs that things are slowly starting to change for the better as the residents have taken to grass roots activism and more long range plans like alternative energy are proposed. In any case, this does not have to be happening this way. But do not think this is something that you do not have to worry about... (Originally reviewed in the blog section on August 15, 2009.) Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Some living in the Rockies witness erosion of their civil liberties, communities and health as energy companies drill beneath their land.
      Director
      Debra Anderson
      Screenwriter
      Joe Day, Rene Garrett, Jean Wendt
      Production Co
      Red Rock Pictures
      Genre
      Documentary
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Mar 10, 2016
      Runtime
      1h 16m