Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaTwo con men try to convince a group of widows to invest in worthless oil wells during the Great Depression.Two con men try to convince a group of widows to invest in worthless oil wells during the Great Depression.Two con men try to convince a group of widows to invest in worthless oil wells during the Great Depression.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 3 vitórias no total
Gloria John
- Townswoman
- (narração)
- …
Jonathan Hawley Purvis
- L.D. Heinz
- (as Jonathan Purvis)
Shawna McGill-Legault
- Housewife
- (as Shawna Pliva)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- ConexõesReferenced in The Babylon Bee: Episode dated 6 October 2020 (2020)
Avaliação em destaque
Not only is this poorly written and even more terribly acted & directed, being from East Texas, 4th generation in the oil business having studied both the recorded history and heard some of it straight from the horse's mouth, I can tell you the movie is pure fiction. It's hilarious one of the reviews says "You can feel the passion and the atmosphere that is East Texas in the film through the cast and story." The author knew little to nothing about the East Texas Oil Field, certainly no first hand knowledge, and it's clear from the story line. None of the cast is from East Texas. They didn't even film the movie in the US, much less Texas or East Texas. They didn't interview or consult with anyone who actually witnessed the oil boom that the movie claims to be about. The fact that it took someone like Sorbo, a F-list failed actor, to act, direct, and cast multiple family members, just to get the book made into a movie shows you how bad the story is. There are a lot of amazing, unbelievable things that happened and stories that came out of East Texas and that era in particular. I hope someday we see a more realistic, honest version of the history told on the big screen. Most people don't even realize that without the East Texas Oil Field we likely couldn't have won WW2.
Yea there were a lot swindlers and conartists here, and there still are, overselling shares in drilling deals and running a number of other types of cons. But they didn't operate like they do in the movie. A whole lot of people did get swindled but the vast majority of them weren't poor old widows. They weren't the conmens' preferred or targeted marks. Most of the "investments" came from average joes looking to get rich quick. I'm sure a few widows and good people did get taken, but there's an old saying here that usually holds true: "It's hard to cheat an honest man". That's not to blame any victims, but when something seems to good to be true (and these deals always did), it always is, and most honest folks know that and that you can't get something for nothing. The widows and families that had the gushers hit on their property rarely got ripped off. It was usually people who weren't involved in the oil business or lived outside of the area and didn't have their boots on the ground here. Most of the people whose property they drilled wells on were already established landowners and by the time the East Texas boom happened, it'd already been happening in other parts of Texas for 20-30 years, so most people either knew what they were doing or knew someone who did. Most of those families are still very wealthy generations later, still collecting royalty checks from those same original wells.
And if a swindler did get caught before they had a chance to skip town and change their name, they rarely faced any real consequences, especially not on the criminal side. They may have been sued civilly but no one ever got much money back, if any. Even if they won a judgment, they couldn't collect. That money is usually gone, spent faster than they made it, spent lavishly and used to pay off earlier victims they scammed to keep them quiet. Almost none of them had any kind of life changing revelation and turned their life around, or ever offered to return any money if they did hit oil because even then they didn't have it to return. If any of them did have, or claim to have, a "born again" awakening, it either didn't last very long or it was just a cover to save their butts so they could do it again.
Yea there were a lot swindlers and conartists here, and there still are, overselling shares in drilling deals and running a number of other types of cons. But they didn't operate like they do in the movie. A whole lot of people did get swindled but the vast majority of them weren't poor old widows. They weren't the conmens' preferred or targeted marks. Most of the "investments" came from average joes looking to get rich quick. I'm sure a few widows and good people did get taken, but there's an old saying here that usually holds true: "It's hard to cheat an honest man". That's not to blame any victims, but when something seems to good to be true (and these deals always did), it always is, and most honest folks know that and that you can't get something for nothing. The widows and families that had the gushers hit on their property rarely got ripped off. It was usually people who weren't involved in the oil business or lived outside of the area and didn't have their boots on the ground here. Most of the people whose property they drilled wells on were already established landowners and by the time the East Texas boom happened, it'd already been happening in other parts of Texas for 20-30 years, so most people either knew what they were doing or knew someone who did. Most of those families are still very wealthy generations later, still collecting royalty checks from those same original wells.
And if a swindler did get caught before they had a chance to skip town and change their name, they rarely faced any real consequences, especially not on the criminal side. They may have been sued civilly but no one ever got much money back, if any. Even if they won a judgment, they couldn't collect. That money is usually gone, spent faster than they made it, spent lavishly and used to pay off earlier victims they scammed to keep them quiet. Almost none of them had any kind of life changing revelation and turned their life around, or ever offered to return any money if they did hit oil because even then they didn't have it to return. If any of them did have, or claim to have, a "born again" awakening, it either didn't last very long or it was just a cover to save their butts so they could do it again.
- kevinramsey-13620
- 27 de out. de 2023
- Link permanente
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- East Texas Oil
- Locações de filme
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- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 40 minutos
- Cor
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