Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows

Big Men

Play trailer Poster for Big Men Released Mar 14, 2014,  1h 39m,  Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
Buy Now Watchlist 100% 19 Reviews Tomatometer 77% 500+ Ratings Popcornmeter
100% Tomatometer 19 Reviews 77% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
Filmmaker Rachel Boynton journeys deep into the African oil industry of Ghana and Nigeria to expose the corruption surrounding it.
Watch on Fandango at Home Buy Now

Where to Watch

Big Men

Critics Reviews

View All (19) Critics Reviews
Owen Gleiberman Entertainment Weekly This moral-economic drama plays out in backroom deals that Boynton records in all their stunning and at times shameless candor. Rated: A- •  Apr 4, 2014 Full Review Chris Vognar Dallas Morning News The constant machinations can get a little confusing. Thankfully, Boynton, a dogged reporter, manages to keep the story on a human scale. Rated: B+ •  Mar 20, 2014 Full Review

Audience Reviews

View All (11) audience reviews
les n A depressingly familiar story, being reenacted again and again. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member Big Men: 9 out of 10: A documentary focused on the acquisition and exploration of Ghanaian oil fields by Dallas based company Kosmos Energy. Big Men also follows the activities of a rebel group in nearby Nigeria that destroys pipelines to force the government to bring more funds to their region. There are a lot of moving parts that can make a documentary great. On paper, this should not be that good a documentary. The subject matter of an American oil exploration company negotiating with a government for oil leasing and exploration rights is not exactly sexy. The film also splits its story with trips to Nigeria for a somewhat unrelated narrative about poverty and rebel activity in the oil fields. The filming is decent with off-camera questions being shouted by the filmmaker but this is just a step above Dateline most of the time. Two things not just save this movie but lift it to one of the best documentaries I have seen this year. First is the access. Rachel Boynton has complete access to everyone. The oil guys invite her into their offices and homes, The Ghanian government is very open (At least for a while), and the rebels basically take her along while they do everything. It really is amazing. The second thing is this becomes a much more interesting story than either Rachel or the various participants could ever know. May you live in interesting times may be a Chinese curse but t is a documentary filmmakers blessing. Two quibbles and or questions though. I wish the film was a bit more upfront about the stock ownership of certain participants before it is revealed later in the film. Would have put some of the "crisis" in better perspective. Second is where the hell did all those rebels get all those ski masks in the middle of the Nigerian Jungle? This film has made me a Rachel Boynton fan for life. She may not be the most polished documentary maker but she is one of the best and one of the luckiest. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/13/23 Full Review
Big Men

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW
We Come as Friends 97% 63% We Come as Friends Watchlist TRAILER for We Come as Friends Cartel Land 89% 82% Cartel Land Watchlist The Forgotten Space 71% 40% The Forgotten Space Watchlist Sharkwater Extinction 100% 91% Sharkwater Extinction Watchlist TRAILER for Sharkwater Extinction The Great Invisible 94% 73% The Great Invisible Watchlist Discover more movies and 온라인카지노추천 shows. View More

Movie Info

Synopsis Filmmaker Rachel Boynton journeys deep into the African oil industry of Ghana and Nigeria to expose the corruption surrounding it.
Director
Rachel Boynton
Producer
Rachel Boynton
Screenwriter
Rachel Boynton
Distributor
Abramorama
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Mar 14, 2014, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Jun 4, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$43.2K
Runtime
1h 39m
Most Popular at Home Now