Shadows of Liberty

Shadows of Liberty
Directed by Jean-Philippe Tremblay
Produced by Jean-Philippe Tremblay
Dan Cantagallo
Written by Jean-Philippe Tremblay
Dan Cantagallo
Narrated by Kerry Shale
Music by Tandis Jenhudson
Cinematography Arthur Jafa
Edited by Gregers Sall
Production
company
DocFactory
Distributed by First Hand Films
Release dates
Running time
93 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

•-•' is a 2012 British documentary film directed by Canadian filmmaker Jean-Philippe Tremblay. The documentary examines the impact of corporate media and concentration of media ownership on journalism and the news. It is based on the book The Media Monopoly by Ben Bagdikian. The film’s title is borrowed from a Thomas Paine quote: "When men yield up the privilege of thinking, the last shadow of liberty quits the horizon."

The film portrays the U.S. media, including the major TV networks, as controlled by fewer and larger conglomerates that exercise extraordinary political social and economic power. It is structured around 14 vignettes that allege censorship at the U.S. networks, including the 1996 TWA 800 air disaster controversy and Nike sweatshops in Asia. It also alleges how the investigation of these stories have cost the jobs, and in some cases the lives, of investigating journalists (as suggested by the case of Gary Webb who committed suicide in 2004. It features interviews with journalists, activists and academics including Amy Goodman, Danny Glover, Julian Assange, Dan Rather, David Simon, Norman Solomon, Robert Baer, Roberta Baskin, Robert W. McChesney, Daniel Ellsberg, Chris Hedges and Kristina Borjesson.

Release

The film received its premiere at the 2012 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival.[1] It received its U.S. premiere at the 2013 National Conference for Media Reform in Denver, Colorado.[2]

Reception

It was nominated for the Cinema for Peace Award for Most Valuable Documentary of the Year in 2013,[3] losing to eventual joint-winners, the Academy Award winning Searching for Sugar Man and Academy Award nominated The Gatekeepers (film). It was also selected at numerous other festivals including Sheffield Doc/Fest[4] and IDFA.[5]

Film critics gave the film mixed reviews. Hollywood Reporter reported that "The timing couldn’t be better for a theatrical documentary about a corporate media monopoly in American journalism." Rabble.ca gave the film high praise, describing it as "beautifully shot and replete with artful graphics and animation, Shadows of Liberty stands on its own as a beautiful artifact" adding that "Artistry, cinematic or otherwise, and clear-eyed political vision rarely come this close together. Shadows of Liberty as a film, and Jean Philippe Tremblay as auteur are both definitely newsworthy."[6] The Toronto Star gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of five, reporting that "Shadows of Liberty asks consumers to look critically at what they are being told, and seek out what they are not" but added that "Unfortunately, the damning material Tremblay uses is dated".[7] Exclaim! described the film as "professionally made but somewhat bloated".[8]

References

External links

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