News Archive 2004

Review: Rory Kennedy’s Indian Point
Kennedy Maize
Electricity Daily
September 13, 2004

While both are left-oriented documentary filmmakers, Rory Kennedy is no Michael Moore. And while both films address issues resulting from the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York City, Indian Point: Imagining the Unimaginable is no Fahrenheit 9/11.

While Moore, whatever you make of his extreme politics and personal characteristics, is a creative, lively, antic guy whose films are worth seeing for their craft alone, Kennedy is plodding, unimaginative, a practitioner of video hackery. Her 42-minute film, which ran for the first time last Thursday evening on HBO, is basically an infomercial for her brother Bobby Kennedy Jr. and his environmental group, Riverkeeper, which has been trying to shut the Indian Point nuclear plant for years, to no avail.

So 9/11 provides another hammer to swing at the nuclear power nail. No new names or faces here, except for an unpersuasive whistleblowing former plant security guard. Kennedy was unable to get any New York politicians on camera, including Sens. Chuck Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Gov. George Pataki, or Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

So who do we get? Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), long the antinuclear stalwart in Congress (who, by the way, is looking a little old and tired these days). Bobby Jr., displaying his rhetorical skills by posing worst case scenarios with vanishing probability and saying, “It could happen.” David Lochbaum of the Union of Concerned Scientists, expressing concern but not much else. Helen Caldicott, the Aussie anti-nuke physician describing the nauseating symptoms of radiation poisoning.

But how in the world does comedian Al Franken qualify as an expert on terrorism, or anything else? That’s right, Al Franken; he wasn’t even funny.

On the other side, Entergy ducked the camera, leaving the field to NRC Commissioner Ed McGaffigan and Marvin Fertel of the Nuclear Energy Institute. They did their best, but were overwhelmed by the suppositions, what ifs, and probability-empty scenarios designed to scare (but which I found boooooooring).

There were also more than a few non-sequiters. For example, early in the film, Bobby complains that there is not a “no-fly” zone over the plant (for perfectly understandable reasons). Later, in a chopper flying over the plant, he notes that he’s getting no attention from any kind of security. Maybe that’s because there isn’t a no-fly zone over the plant?

Also, disparaging Sandia tests years ago that flew a fighter jet into a simulated containment and found no significant damage to the concrete (but plenty to the jet), the film makes the point that a fuel-loaded 767 is a lot bigger and potentially more damaging. Could we elaborate on the forces involved? Then, during one of the chopper sequences, Bobby notes that if they were in a Cessna 172, they could fly it into the nuke in a matter of seconds. But a Cessna 172 is a butterfly, compared even to the Sandia fighter.

The whistleblower claimed that Entergy wasn’t spending enough on security, saying “There’s no budget for training,” implying that the guards aren’t trained. But the film describes him as a former trainer of the guard force at the plant, and even shows film taken during force-on-force training exercises.

The film argues that 20-25 percent of the guard force – accompanied by shots of a grossly overweight guard – are so obese and out of shape that they have trouble going from prone to vertical. Yet the training exercise video doesn’t show that at all. The guards are all mobile, agile, and hostile. The film, while hostile to Indian Point, is neither agile nor mobile.

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