Over 250 people packed the Waterville (ME) Opera House for the World Premiere of “Tapped” on Sunday, July 12. Stephanie Soechtig’s debut feature is an unflinching examination of the big business of bottle water.
Grassroots organizations from Fryeburg, Kennebunk, Kennebunkport, Wells, Shapleigh and Newfield celebrated before the film with the Tapped production team.
Photos – All photos copyright V. Kelly Bellis; can be freely used with proper credit. High-resolution pictures are available upon request.
Local Water Activists Speak Out – Independent video
“Tapped” audience reactions – Independent video
News Video – WCSH-TV, Portland
Review –
“Tapped” movie website • Watch segment about privatization
The timely documentary examines the unregulated and unseen world of an industry that aims to privatize and sell back the one resource that ought never to become a commodity: our water.
From the plastic production of bottled water to North Pacific Ocean Gyre where millions of these bottles end up, Tapped trails the path of the bottle water industry and the communities which were the unwitting chips on the table.
The movie features grassroots stories from Fryeburg and Southern Maine where local residents have waged long campaigns to stop the Nestle Corporation from mining their communities groundwater to resell under the Poland Spring brand name.
“Tapped reflects the reality of our Maine communities as we are forced to put aside our daily routine in order to fight to maintain public control over our most basic need: water,” says Emily Posner of Defending Water for Life in Maine. “Our growing water justice community recognizes that our state’s unique culture, ecology and economy is intricately dependent upon clean water and healthy watersheds. The line in the sand must be drawn to stop the massive exploitation of our state’s natural legacy for the lining of corporate coffers.”