Instructive not only for students of South American (and oil) politics but also for anyone who questions the importance of the media in determining who gets power and how long they keep it.

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The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (2003)
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Reviews Counted:48
Fresh:47
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.9/10
Consensus: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised is as persuasive and engrossing as it is unapologetically biased.
Theatrical Release:Nov 5, 2003 Limited
Synopsis: "Don't be poisoned by their lies," says Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez in the last line of THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED, referring to the way that the media corrupts the truth for the... "Don't be poisoned by their lies," says Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez in the last line of THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED, referring to the way that the media corrupts the truth for the purpose of political persuasion. And thus the immediacy of this documentary--which consists of fast-moving footage captured during a two-day period in April 2002 when Chavez was kidnapped from the presidential palace in Caracas and the media announced a successful coup--serves simply as a good example of media manipulation. Using television news clips, the film shows how the privately owned Venezuelan media attacks Chavez, comparing him to Fidel Castro and accusing him of mental instability. Washington chimes in, accusing Chavez of being in cahoots with Columbian narco-terrorists. But the documentary also establishes Chavez's position as the people's president. He put in place a democratic constitution and promised to redistribute the nation's significant wealth--Venezuela is the world's fourth largest exporter of oil--to benefit the poor, who represent 80 percent of the population. And from there, the media reports against him sound like cards being played in the oil game. The Irish filmmakers, Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Brian, were inside the palace making a routine documentary about Chavez when the coup began. Meanwhile, a million Chavez supporters gathered in the streets outside demanding that their leader be restored. Within 48 hours, their pleas were answered and Chavez was president again. THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED offers a fascinating inside perspective on both Chavez's popularity and the way that media can bastardize the truth for political gain. [More]
Director: Donnacha O'Brian, Kim Bartley
Director: Donnacha O'Brian, Kim Bartley
Studio: Vitagraph Films
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Reviews for The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
What resonates in the end are the forces behind it, what it says about its time, and how, in fact, it ever happened at all.
Filmmakers Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Brien happen to be in all the right places at all the right times.
Revolution... is not just a portrait of a fascinating, paradoxical leader but of a vibrant people and culture long-hidden by our own media.
while there is a story to be told about the 2002 coup, this is definitely not the documentary to tell it.
An amazing record of what has been called history's shortest-lived coup d'etat.
Does an excellent job of showing how powerful television has become in getting one's message across... as well as how easily television and some creative editing can manipulate that very message.
A gripping, nearly perfect documentary, chronicling a heart-stopping rise, fall and triumphant reversal in the space of its 74-minute running time.
Stands as our best chance to understand what happened in Caracas, even if the filmmakers' pro-Chavez stance should send you to alternate sources for the larger picture.
Bartley and O’Briain can be accused of being biased about their subject, Chavez, but show me a documentary film... that does not take sides.
this riveting piece of work should encourage viewers to continue to investigate the subject on their own after leaving the theater
WOW! This documentary sticks with you and days later you'll still be thinking about how easy it was to manipulate an entire country.
A remarkable example of the power of film to capture unfolding historic events.
It is remarkable because the filmmakers, Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Briain, had access to virtually everything that happened within the palace during the entire episode.
A fascinating account of history in the making that plays like a cinematic whiplash.
Both farcical and deeply troubling, it unfolds with the kind of breathless, minute-by-minute immediacy that only eyewitness reportage can bring, and offers an important perspective on the role the media inevitably plays in contemporary revolution.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie | Date |
|---|---|---|
| 90% 90% | The White Ribbon | 12/30 |
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