Since I've seen The Corporation, not a day has gone by that I haven't thought of one of the film's lessons.
The Corporation (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:106
Fresh:96
Rotten:10
Average Rating:7.4/10
Consensus: The Corporation is a satisfyingly dense, thought-provoking rebuttal to some of capitalism's central arguments.
Theatrical Release:Jun 4, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $1,350,094
Synopsis: THE CORPORATION is a well-organized and deeply fascinating documentary about the growing prominence of large global businesses, and the way that their decisions are impacting the world. The film... THE CORPORATION is a well-organized and deeply fascinating documentary about the growing prominence of large global businesses, and the way that their decisions are impacting the world. The film shows how corporations have ballooned in size and power since the industrial revolution, and explains the laws and loopholes that allow them to remain nearly unaccountable for their actions. If they break a law, they are willing to admit guilt and pay the fine, because the profits outweigh the penalties. Therefore, they continue to cause serious environmental problems by dumping waste into rivers and oceans and by depleting natural resources, resulting in irreversible damage to the earth which also poses a serious threat to human life. Beyond environmental issues, the film shows how corporations exploit underpaid laborers in third world countries, violate basic human rights, make deals with foreign countries who are known enemies of the U.S., and in some instances perpetuate fascist regimes. Valuable, informative talking-head commentary comes from a diverse group including Ray Anderson, CEO of carpet manufacturer Interface; Sir Mark Moody-Stuart, former chairman of Royal Dutch Shell; Dr. Vandana Shiva, feminist and ecologist; Milton Friedman, Nobel prize-winning economist; Marc Barry, corporate spy; Joe Badaracco, professor of business ethics at Harvard; and activists Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, and Michael Moore. Providing useful references to major news stories that illustrate various corporate developments, and good information about how the system works, THE CORPORATION empowers viewers and shows them that they can realistically enact change. For that reason, this documentary makes real progress, encouraging viewers to take the world's future into their own hands and away from corporations whose sole interest is profit. [More]
Starring: Noam Chomsky, Michael Moore, Howard Zinn, Chris Barrett
Starring: Noam Chomsky, Michael Moore, Howard Zinn, Chris Barrett
Director: Mark Achbar, Jennifer Abbott
Director: Mark Achbar, Jennifer Abbott
Screenwriter: Joel Bakan
Producer: Bart Simpson
Composer: Leonard J. Paul
Studio: Zeitgeist Films
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Reviews for The Corporation
Well-rounded and fair, yet its core arguments are so strong that it inspires responsible and immediate activism.
Corporations are out to get you, and you need to be afraid. You need to lock your back door at night and keep a gun under your pillow.
This documentary's extra-long running time and a narrator who sounds like a sedated Star Trek computer won't win many converts.
At its most effective, the movie is a chastening, sobering, and thorough work of film journalism, however shortsighted.
If not a call to arms, The Corporation amounts to a manifesto against the growing power of global capitalism
For all its hysterical bleating about the pervasive evils of corporate control, The Corporation is itself a conformist piece of propaganda that has its own corporate mindset.
It's like a company that diversifies into so many different product lines that it forgets what its core mission is.
A highly entertaining and instructive look at a subject that's rarely discussed in detail.
An impassioned polemic, filled with information sure to break up any dinner-table conversation.
It's a movie so chock full of information, so dense with context and analysis that it will keep you thinking and reacting, no matter what your bent or slant -- and no matter where you stand on the world-wide corporate ladder.
Abrangente, jornalisticamente impecável, inteligente, complexo e socialmente responsável – mas também repetitivo e mais longo do que o ideal.
The 150-year old legal construct of the corporation, as a "person," is dissected for all to see how its lack of accountability has enabled the faulty model to become a ruling institution, acting beyond the reach of any government.
Running 145 minutes, the film barely has enough time to get its main points in, and it could have gone on much longer and still remained fascinating.
A must-see that exposes the increasing interconnection of business, politics and 'every living system of Earth'...
Latest News for The Corporation
February 10, 2008:
WashingtonPost.com: The undercurrent of this exhaustive critique is really all about good and evil, and in what ways often sordid human history is determined, not as a product of malice, but by the most typical people who could care less. ![]()
More...
January 25, 2006:
SUNDANCE: Wintertime For The Producers
When Sean Covel brought a low budget indie film he produced to Sundance in 2004, he had no idea how it would be received.
“We had no barometer, he said. “When it first... More...
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