germany

The Big Sellout (Der Grosse Ausverkauf)

The Big Sellout (Der Grosse Ausverkauf) (Director: Florian Opitz, Germany, 2006): Beautifully shot on film, The Big Sellout is yet another strong polit­ical doc­u­mentary, this one on the theme of privat­iz­a­tion. Since privat­iz­a­tion is a key­stone of neo­lib­eral eco­nomic policy all over the world, the film takes us to sev­eral dif­ferent loc­ales to see its effects on real people. What we dis­cover is that the effort by mul­tina­tional cor­por­a­tions to turn the neces­sities of life (health­care, elec­tri­city, even water) into com­mod­ities is having a dev­ast­ating effect on the people of the devel­oping world.

In the Philippines, Minda spends all of her time trying to scrape money together for dia­lysis treat­ments for her teen­aged son. In South Africa, Bongani is part of a group of skilled act­iv­ists who restore elec­trical ser­vice to those whose power has been cut off for non-payment. In Bolivia, Rosa is a grand­mother who stood up to the face­less cor­por­a­tion that was attempting to privatize her city’s water supply. And in England, Simon the train driver details the breakup of British Rail and the decline of rail ser­vice in that country.

In every case, privat­iz­a­tion was the cul­prit, but to be fair, Opitz attempts to engage with the eco­nom­ists at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund who often impose privat­iz­a­tion as a pre­con­di­tion for lending to devel­oping nations. Surprisingly for the dir­ector, he gets very little cooper­a­tion from these shadowy bodies, who are ostens­ibly required to be trans­parent and account­able to their member nations. The one eco­nomist he does inter­view is Joseph Stiglitz, former Chief Economist of the World Bank who now dis­agrees with the rush to privatize everything, and who has become an opponent of most of the eco­nomic policies of globalization.

I was reminded when watching this film of sev­eral other strong anti-globalization doc­u­ment­aries of recent years, including The Take, The Corporation, and even The Yes Men. The Big Sellout adds some heartrending per­sonal stories from sev­eral corners of the world, and it’s clear that privat­iz­a­tion is really only helping those with too much money make even more of it. Without having to pay lip ser­vice to the demo­cratic ideals of national gov­ern­ments, cor­por­a­tions are con­cerned with just one thing: the pur­suit of profits. The profits may come, but the human costs should be tal­lied against them.

The only weak­ness in the film may be that I was left won­dering what I could pos­sibly do, in my com­fort­able First World life, to combat this creeping sick­ness. The film’s German web site has some edu­ca­tional mater­ials, so I hope these get trans­lated for the English site soon.

Here is the Q&A with pro­ducer Florian Opitz from after the screening:

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Duration: 12:37

Official site for the film

9/10(9/10)

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Workingman's Death

Workingman’s Death (Austria/Germany, dir­ector Michael Glawogger): After you see this film, you’ll never com­plain about your job again. Subtitled some­thing like “Five Portraits of Work in the Twenty-First Century,” Glawogger’s doc­u­mentary fea­tures some of the most dan­gerous, dif­fi­cult, or just plain unpleasant work in the world.

Each seg­ment except the last one is about twenty-five minutes long, and is shot without any voi­ceover nar­ra­tion and very little edit­or­i­al­izing. We are simply presented with people working and talking about their work. The dir­ector pos­sesses a very paint­erly sense of com­pos­i­tion, and we’re often presented with shots of workers posing as if they were in front of a still camera. The cam­er­a­work is even more impressive when it is moving, and I often found myself won­dering how they were able to film in some of these conditions.

The seg­ments follow, in order, a group of miners in Ukraine who have dug their own coal shafts, a group of men in Indonesia who col­lect sulfur from an active vol­cano and haul it down the moun­tain­side, butchers at an open-air slaughter­house in Nigeria, men who break apart rusting ships for scrap metal in Pakistan, and steel­workers in China. Although all of these workers are merely sur­viving, the thing that struck me most was how con­tented, even happy, most of them were.

That being said, three of the five seg­ments fea­tured Islamic soci­eties, and I found myself won­dering about the con­nec­tions between the con­di­tions these men were working in and the rise of Islamic rad­ic­alism. Among the ship­breakers in Pakistan, for instance, there was an inter­esting seg­ment which fol­lowed a pho­to­grapher who cir­cu­lated among the men char­ging them a fee to take pic­tures of them holding an assault rifle. There was no voi­ceover, but I got the impres­sion that these men wanted to be seen as revolu­tion­aries instead of just sub­sist­ence scrap workers.

The most intense seg­ment had to be among the butchers, and there was quite a lot of blood and gore evident as we watched the men work. But strangely, I found this a more honest approach to the pro­duc­tion of food than I saw in the factory farms in We Feed The World. These butchers are “hands-on,” literally.

The final seg­ment, filmed among steel­workers in China, was the shortest, and the least inter­esting, but the dir­ector was trying to end with the optimism of the Chinese workers for the steel industry, which he con­trasts with shots of a defunct steel mill in Germany that’s been turned into an art install­a­tion. His point was slightly unclear, but overall, his unflinching eye for detail, even in some har­rowing work envir­on­ments, makes this doc­u­mentary a must-see.

9/10(9/10)

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Lost Children

Lost Children (Germany/Uganda, 2005, Directors: Ali Samadi Ahadi, Oliver Stoltz, 98 minutes): All three of the films I saw today were about “chil­dren in peril” but none were more hor­ri­fying than this one. Northern Uganda has been caught up in civil war for almost twenty years. The rebels of the “Lord’s Resistance Army” make it their primary tactic to kidnap chil­dren from local vil­lages, for­cing them to fight in their army. Children as young as 8 are taught to kill with guns and knives, and those who don’t share in the atro­cities are killed them­selves, often by other con­scripted children.

Catholic relief agency Caritas is run­ning a rein­teg­ra­tion centre for those chil­dren who manage to escape the rebel army. It is a for­mid­able chal­lenge. Often the chil­dren have phys­ical injuries, either sus­tained in battle or in their har­rowing escapes. The mental damage is much harder to repair. They often have night­mares, and are ter­ri­fied of being reab­ducted. Their fam­ilies are sus­pi­cious of them, and are also afraid of being tar­getted again by the rebels. In these cir­cum­stances, the social workers and doc­tors at the centre have their hands full.

We meet Jennifer, 14, who spent five years with the Lord’s Resistance Army, fighting gov­ern­ment troops and ter­ror­izing civil­ians, all the while being raped reg­u­larly as a commander’s con­cu­bine. And Opio, just 8 years old, describing how he bashed in a man’s skull with a rifle butt. Then there is sens­itive Kelama, 13, who was forced to kill a woman in front of her child and who now can’t stop dreaming about her. All these chil­dren have a long road ahead of them, first rein­teg­rating with their fam­ilies and com­munities, and then hoping that the rebels don’t return for them.

It’s dif­fi­cult to “rate” films like this, because they don’t really func­tion as pieces of art. Instead, they ful­fill another aspect of the documentary’s role, that of bearing wit­ness. In that sense, this film is a clear-eyed look at some of the most hor­ri­fying crimes against chil­dren ever per­pet­rated. By making chil­dren do their killing for them, the so-called “Lord’s Resistance Army” have killed the child­hoods of these chil­dren. As they piece together the shreds of their humanity, they are no longer chil­dren. What they will become is a mystery.

Information on helping the chil­dren here.

Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers

9/10(9/10)

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