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IMDbPro

La fin de la pauvreté?

Titre original : The End of Poverty?
  • 2008
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
474
MA NOTE
La fin de la pauvreté? (2008)
A phenomenal discourse on why poverty exists when there is so much wealth in the world. A must see for anyone wanting to understand not only the US economic system but the foundations of today's global economy.
Lire trailer2:37
1 Video
2 photos
Documentaire

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA phenomenal discourse on why poverty exists when there is so much wealth in the world. A must see for anyone wanting to understand not only the US economic system but the foundations of tod... Tout lireA phenomenal discourse on why poverty exists when there is so much wealth in the world. A must see for anyone wanting to understand not only the US economic system but the foundations of today's global economy.A phenomenal discourse on why poverty exists when there is so much wealth in the world. A must see for anyone wanting to understand not only the US economic system but the foundations of today's global economy.

  • Réalisation
    • Philippe Diaz
  • Scénario
    • Philippe Diaz
  • Casting principal
    • Martin Sheen
    • Amartya Sen
    • John Perkins
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,4/10
    474
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Philippe Diaz
    • Scénario
      • Philippe Diaz
    • Casting principal
      • Martin Sheen
      • Amartya Sen
      • John Perkins
    • 16avis d'utilisateurs
    • 21avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The End of Poverty?
    Trailer 2:37
    The End of Poverty?

    Photos1

    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Martin Sheen
    Martin Sheen
    • Self - Narrator
    • (voix)
    Amartya Sen
    Amartya Sen
    • Self - Author & Nobel Prize Winner
    John Perkins
    • Self - Author & Economist
    Eric Toussaint
    Eric Toussaint
    • Self - Author & President of CADTM
    Edgardo Lander
    • Self - Professor & Historian
    H.W.O. Okoth-Ogendo
    • Self - Author & Law Professor
    Miriam Campos
    • Self - Ministry of Indigenous People, Bolivia
    Mashengu wa Mwachofi
    • Self - Former Parliamentarian, Kenya
    Maria Luisa Mendoca
    • Self - Rede Social President, Brazil
    Jaime De Amorim
    • Self - Coordintor, Landless People Movement Brazil
    William Easterly
    • Self - Author & Professor
    Michael Watts
    • Self - Author & Professor
    Álvaro García Linera
    • Self - Vice-President, Bolivia
    • (as Alvaro García Lineras)
    Nora Castaneda
    • Self - Women's Bank President, Venezuela
    João Pedro Stédile
    • Self - Landless Movement Leader, Brazil
    • (as Joao Pedro Stedile)
    Serge Latouche
    • Self - Author & Professor
    Kipruto Arap Kirwa
    • Self - Agriculture Minister, Kenya
    Clifford Cobb
    • Self - Author & Historian
    • Réalisation
      • Philippe Diaz
    • Scénario
      • Philippe Diaz
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs16

    7,4474
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    Avis à la une

    8SimonB-4

    A good documentary about the causes of world poverty

    A good documentary about the causes, including root causes, of world poverty. Chiefly, the world's natural resources are controlled by a small number of rich governments and corporations, and whatever is necessary is done to maintain the status quo.

    A solution to world poverty is beyond the scope of the film. It's beyond the power of everyone with such an ambition since ... whatever is necessary is done to maintain the status quo. The film does argue that the taxation of personal income needs to be vastly reduced in favour of increased taxes on land, particularly land containing natural resources; or the privatization of world's natural resources would need to end. But no-one sees this happening anytime soon.

    It's possible to criticize the use of statistics which, without a tiresome definition of terms, comes across as a series of sweeping statements.
    2freeds

    An "examination" of world poverty that leads nowhere

    Phillipe Diaz's "The End of Poverty?" pretends to take up the cause of the world's oppressed. According to the short plot summary (written by producer Beth Portello) which appears on the main IMDb page for this film, it was "Inspired by the works of 19th century economist Henry George, who examined the causes of industrial depressions." The fact that the film methodically ignores the contributions of the far more influential and widely celebrated 19th century investigator of industrial depressions and poverty, Karl Marx, is but one indication of this film's intellectually shoddy and ultimately dishonest character.

    "The End of Poverty?" is structured as a series of three intermixed components, which goes on for nearly all of a seemingly endless 106 minutes: (1) interviews with impoverished people in the "Third World," which, here, is synonymous with the "South"; (2) interviews with historians, economists and political thinkers (mostly from the "First World") who sketch out some of the history of European colonialism and its effects on the colonized peoples and (3) full-screen, white-on-black statistical statements like "X percent of the world's people consume Y percent of the world's energy" etc. Along the way, some of the commentators point out that the rise of capitalism was based on — and a large share of its profits continues to be based on — the ruthless exploitation of the colonial world. Although the talking heads often use the circumspect word "system," references to "capitalism" appear more frequently as the film progresses. Thus, the viewer might reasonably expect the film to culminate with a call for the end (overthrow?) of the system which causes all this misery: capitalism. Don't hold your breath!

    The film's portrait of the world's wretched is peculiarly skewed. Most of the interviews with poor people and footage of pitiful living conditions are from South America, notably Bolivia. The time allotted to Africa is a distant second and focuses on Kenya, with a much smaller Tanzanian component. There is precious little footage from — or mention of — Asia. Most of the interviewed poor are or were connected to the land in some way. Industrial workers are essentially ignored. Causes of poverty such as war and ethnic victimization are similarly overlooked. "Does poverty exist even within the over-consuming 'North' as well?" one might ask. As far as "The End of Poverty?" is concerned, the latter is invisible. Other viewers might be forgiven for wondering about the effects on poverty of the overthrow of capitalism in the Soviet Union, China and Cuba (the "Second World"?). Again, silence reigns. Thus, as a study of the world's misery, the film is impressively inadequate.

    As the film enters its final stage, there is a half-hearted invocation of the long-forgotten U.S. economic philosopher, Henry George. In his 1879 "Progress and Poverty," George proposed that poverty could be eliminated(!) by the abolition of ground rent and of all taxes save one: a tax on land. Not only was this panacea unoriginal (it had been advocated for more than 50 years by the followers of classical British economist David Ricardo), it was wacky. Karl Marx thought that George's theory was "the more unpardonable in him because he ought to have put the question to himself in just the opposite way: How did it happen that in the United States, where . . . in comparison with civilised Europe, the land was accessible to the great mass of the people, . . . capitalist economy and the corresponding enslavement of the working class have developed more rapidly and shamelessly than in any other country!" For Marx, adherents of George's view ". . . try to bamboozle . . . the world into believing that if ground rent were transformed into a state tax, all the evils of capitalist production would disappear of themselves. The whole thing is therefore simply an attempt . . . to save capitalist domination and indeed to establish it afresh on an even wider basis than its present one." (See Marx's letter to F. A. Sorge, June 20, 1881.) The film does not make so bold as to try to resurrect George's single-tax panacea. Instead, it offers an updated version: the "Commons" paradigm. Supporters of this liberal nostrum believe that the solution for the world's poor is to remove all of the land from private ownership and to hold it in common. Unsurprisingly, they do not explain how to achieve this little miracle.

    In the film's last few minutes, some of the commentators raise the specter of the supposed limitations (as judged by what standard — present-day capitalist production?) of the world's resources and the excessive and unequal consumption of those resources by the "North." The real aim of Diaz & Co. here is to guilt-trip gullible people in the industrialized countries into adopting moralistic "use less energy" schemes, as if conscience-stricken lowering of consumption in the "First World" will magically increase consumption in the "Third." The accelerating global descent into depression, triggered by the unprecedentedly massive "mortgage securities" fraud perpetrated by the U.S.'s financial sector, will, no doubt, achieve Diaz's aim of lowering consumption in the "North." Does he actually believe this will benefit the world's poor?

    For Diaz & Co., the "North" is an undifferentiated entity. Its working class, whose exploitation remains necessary for the survival of the capitalist system and which regularly loses some of its ranks into the maelstrom of poverty, does not figure in their calculations. And this is the most pernicious omission of their retreaded Malthusian ideology. For it is ONLY the working class of the developed countries — once it becomes conscious of its historic class interests — which has the SOCIAL POWER to reorganize production on a rationally-planned, world-wide, for-need basis, in order to lift itself AND the colonial masses out of the chain of misery. Because "The End of Poverty?" conceals this vital knowledge from anyone who is interested in ending poverty, it is, finally, an obstacle to achieving that goal.

    Barry Freed
    10ManWithGoodTaste

    Uses facts and logic above everything else to deliver the message

    This is one of those documentary films you simply must see. Instead of trying to shock you or force you to do a specific action, it leaves the viewer to make the decision. It is not about poverty as a whole, and it doesn't try to solve the problem entirely. Instead it is about poverty in Third World Countries. The film uses nothing but facts and logic to make clear that it is caused by Europe and the US, who first took the lives of many, then took the resources, then used religion and forced economy ("fair" trade & such) to make sure those countries will never recover and forever be in debt. It is very good that something makes you realize what our (well, at least recent) leaders had been doing without us knowing. Maybe we are just stupid, letting this happen, I don't know.
    BridgeBuilder2006

    I like videos about history like this one

    The longer I live the more I value history.

    I am less distracted with the tiny incidents of current events when I understand the historic context.

    Our current reality is the result of thousands of chains of events that stretch back in time.

    I have come to especially value videos that tell the stories that go back hundreds of years.

    This offers a summary of major events over the globe during the centuries.

    I do not agree with all that is said here but many major parts of the mural of history are presented well.
    7TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    Truth

    This documentary explores poverty as it exists today, and takes us through a historical account of how it came to be, as it is today(it does not go into the larger discussion of there having been different status levels and each having specific benefits(or limitations) as long as there have been even barely organized communities - this would require its own feature-length piece), across the world, not only in the US. It does so with personal interviews with economists with the perspective and who've studied the subject, and the individual workers and their families, who are living with the consequences of the irresponsible and callous actions of corporate leaders, banks and politicians. This engages with a healthy mix of facts and accounts(to keep it from getting dry or letting it become too theoretical, we have to remember that there are actual people suffering, and many of them, no less), and it keeps a nice pace throughout. It's well-edited. This really gets you wanting to solve the problem, and few will keep holding on to the opposing opinion after watching this. There is disturbing content in this. I recommend this to everyone. 7/10

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    Histoire

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 décembre 2009 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Amazon Site
      • Official site
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Portugais
      • Espagnol
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The End of Poverty?
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Bolivie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Cinema Libre Studio
      • The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 1 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 57 805 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 12 593 $US
      • 15 nov. 2009
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 57 805 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 46 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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