In 2010, Mike Williams (Mark Wahlberg) and his wife, Felicia (Kate Hudson), drove together to the heliport. He was leaving for a 3-week stint on the Deepwater Horizon. At the heliport, he met James "Mr. Jimmy" Harrell (Kurt Russell) and Andrea Fleytas (Gina Rodriguez), who were also going to the Deepwater Horizon. A pair of BP executives were included as well. As the helicopter hove into view, Mr. Jimmy was surprised to see a ship near the platform. That generally indicated that the well was ready and the platform would travel to a new site shortly. When the helicopter landed, he briefly conferred with a test team who did not give satisfactory answers to Mr. Jimmy. What was the situation?
Mike and Mr. Jimmy found Don Vidrine (John Malkovich), a BP Executive, in a good mood. This particular site had been running over cost and beyond schedule, but he was now certain that the well was ready to hand off to an oil extraction platform. They could move to a new site. Mr. Jimmy was doubtful and wanted a test. The test was inconclusive, but Vidrine was confident. Though the Deepwater Horizon was owned by Transocean, it was currently leased to BP. Jimmy deferred to BP's decision.
As it turns out, the well was not hunky dory. In fact, it was a timebomb that exploded, sending pressure and oil into the platform with destructive force. The oil soon caught fire and more explosions wracked the doomed platform. Could they cap the well? Could they even escape the platform?
The movie opens and closes with the testimony of the actual crew, including Mike and Mr. Jimmy, neither of whom look much like Wahlberg or Russell. As with the investigation that followed the explosions, the movie pins the blame on BP.
Though true, this is a disaster movie right out of the 1970s. I was reminded of The Tower Inferno as everything exploded and everyone fled the spreading fire. Mike proves to be the central character who ties the story into a clean narrative. Wahlberg does a great job. Russell is excellent as Mr. Jimmy and Malkovich is terrific as the supercilious executive who is humbled when his claims are proved wrong.
Mostly good popcorn fun, but the conclusion is mostly a downer. Is this a movie for entertainment or is it a documentary?