A far-ranging look at the biases in how we see things, focusing on the use of police body cameras.A far-ranging look at the biases in how we see things, focusing on the use of police body cameras.A far-ranging look at the biases in how we see things, focusing on the use of police body cameras.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 15 nominations total
Featured reviews
Using big words, quotes, and philosophical takes does not even remotely mean you understand it. It's like it's 2 attempted movies, smushed together; 1 is a walking tour of Axon with actual footage - ok, it's fine, and the second one is a grad school project for liberal arts trying to sound way smarter than it is. Fails miserably on both parts. This film shot for the moon and tripped on its shoe laces while getting dressed instead. Put some actual time and research into a tactile subject. People will like it more than this attempted philosophical jargon that comes off as a movie made by someone who read the title of a book about the subject. Skip this.
For such a fascinating topic, this "documentary" manages to create 110 minutes of the most uninspired, dull, and pretentious content imaginable.
Except for the fascinating excerpts of parts of the history of photography, it tries so hard to be profound, to weave broad narratives, to write an erudite documentary essay, that it just comes across as pompous and dull.
There is almost no intelligent commentary or narrative here, or insights. A total and utter waste of time!
Except for the fascinating excerpts of parts of the history of photography, it tries so hard to be profound, to weave broad narratives, to write an erudite documentary essay, that it just comes across as pompous and dull.
There is almost no intelligent commentary or narrative here, or insights. A total and utter waste of time!
Very messy documentary!!! The subject is all over the place, terrible editing, immature camera work and sound. It looks like a graduate school assignment.
Was this a experimental work???
Was this a experimental work???
Covers a small handful of subjects related to photography, criminology, and surveillance, but frustratingly spends most of its time on the least interesting ones. Whenever it picks up on something good that stimulates curiosity, that is too soon dropped and it returns to tedious scenes repeatedly featuring a corporate salesman, and boring police training sessions. It has about three important questions to ask, and asks far more that are really not fully formed. Even the good questions raised are not direct, but more like "how does the future see the past?" or "what do we see when we see a picture?" In other words, woolly-headed academic or philosophical matters which the film should clarify or provide some insight into, but instead just drops in unexamined because they sound important and might add some plausible weight to the emptiness. Seems to be a critique of surveillance technology and an indictment of capitalism's effort to sell its way out of societal failure, but I am reading that into it, as nothing is explicitly stated or advocated for in this film. As others have said, it is slow and boring. The historical snippets are great, but they make up roughly ten percent of the screen time. Not very good film making, not an illuminating documentary, just trying to seem that way and coming up very short. Aesthetically, the annoying, loud, spacey music, long dull shots, and ponderously lazy writing and editing make this a chore. Needed a lot more thought and work before release.
Boring. Audio hurt my ears at certain points. Overall I'm annoyed that I wasted my time watching this. Read some other of the low star reviews for more details about any this was a stinker.
Did you know
- Quotes
Theo Anthony: At the back of the eye is the optic nerve.
Theo Anthony: It connects the eye to the brain.
Theo Anthony: The optic nerve receives no visual information.
Theo Anthony: It's a blind spot.
Theo Anthony: At the exact point where the world meets the seeing of the world, we're blind.
Theo Anthony: We do not perceive this blind spot in our vision.
Theo Anthony: The brain invents a world to fill the hole at the center of it.
- How long is All Light, Everywhere?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Світло, всюди
- Filming locations
- Scottsdale, Arizona, USA(Axon Enterprise, Inc.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $37,266
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,376
- Jun 6, 2021
- Gross worldwide
- $37,266
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Color
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