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"Dark Waters" is based on the real-life saga of Rob Bilott, a corporate attorney who battled chemical giant DuPont over PFOAs, a toxin that impacted West Virginia.
Mark Ruffalo told "The View" on Thursday that his new film, "Dark Waters," which is based on an environmental lawsuit against the chemical company DuPont, will expose a story that almost "nobody ...
Mark Ruffalo discusses "Dark Waters" with Rob Bilott, the real-life lawyer who sued DuPont after learning that the company was dumping chemicals in West Virginia and poisoning local water.
Dark Waters is now in limited release and opens wide on Friday, December 6. Rob Bilott’s new book Exposure: Poisoned Water, Corporate Greed, and One Lawyer’s Twenty-Year Battle against DuPont is now ...
DuPont isn’t planning a big public-awareness campaign to tell its side of the story as a dark part of company history is dramatized on the big screen. Mark Ruffalo stars as Robert Bilott in “Dark ...
Dark Waters, starring Mark Ruffalo and Anne Hathaway, launches in Europe on February 28. It tells of the toxic spills scandal that ultimately led to US chemicals giant DuPont paying US$671 million ...
Dark Waters documents one of the largest cover ups in US history. Mark Ruffalo stars as Robert Bilott, the lawyer who has been in a 20-year battle with DuPont chemical factory in Parkersberg ...
Dark Waters follows Robert Bilott's (Mark Ruffalo) real-life legal battle against DuPont over the release of a toxic chemical into Parkersburg, West Virginia's water supply, affecting 70,000 ...
Dark Waters, starring Mark Ruffalo and Anne Hathaway, launches in Europe on February 28. It tells of the toxic spills scandal that ultimately led to US chemicals giant DuPont paying US$671 million ...
Dark Waters, starring Mark Ruffalo and Anne Hathaway, launches in Europe on February 28. It tells of the toxic spills scandal that ultimately led to US chemicals giant DuPont paying US$671 million ...
Todd Haynes’ “Dark Waters,” about the prolonged (and ongoing) legal fight to uncover the environmental damage of cancer-inducing “forever chemicals” and hold their corporate makers ...