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THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND

Wonderful, irreverent…This Land is a documentary against documentaries: none of the Supersized antics more stunt than statement, little of the Fahrenheit scandal and pomp, what's to be found here are average people fighting against money and power for dignity and peace.” - Josh Cohen, NEW YORK PRESS

“As powerful as Michael Moore’s firebrand muckraking… Essential viewing.” - Marrit Ingman, The Austin Chronicle

“Top rate, a must see" - Bob Longino, The Atlanta Journal Constitution

“Brilliant…the film encourages people to stand up, ask questions." - Stephanie Holmes, The Monitor

THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND premiered at SxSW and has screened internationally on four continents, at a wide range of venues ranging from theaters and festivals to large-scale special event screenings for numerous political and social organizations, including The Nation Magazine and the SEIU. This Land  was part of Exit Art Gallery’s “Other America” exhibit, it was included in an exhibit at Art Basel, Miami, and the it was one of only two feature-length documentaries selected for the 2006 Whitney Biennial.

"In their profoundly humanist documentary film This Land Is Your Land, Lori Cheatle and Daisy Wright explore the pervasive influence corporations are exerting on life in America. In archival footage and recorded testimonies (the filmmakers traveled across the country interviewing people for more than three years), they trace the impact of corporate power on individual lives, the social fabric, and the very principles of democracy. In the first part of the film, Cheatle and Wright document the ubiquitous presence of corporate logos as well as our susceptibility to branding and the extent to which such forces are internalized: one interviewee declares that she is going to be herself, “not this walking, talking billboard,” all the while wearing an Old Navy T-shirt and a Nike baseball cap. 

"Gradually moving on to graver issues, the filmmakers address the consequences of foreign outsourcing, the dwindling resources of the middle class, and the increasing gap between rich and poor. A former paper mill worker and union leader testifies to the dramatic consequences of losing his job a few years shy of retirement and the subsequent struggle to make ends meet by juggling multiple low-paying jobs with no health-care benefits. In their historical examination of corporate power, Cheatle and Wright contend that the founding of the United States actually sprang from anticorporate sentiment: colonial merchants launched the Boston Tea Party as a protest not only of British taxation policies but of the unfair trade advantages granted to Britain’s East India Company. 

"At the heart of Cheatle and Wright’s film are the stories of individual people who have beaten the odds in their battles against corporate dominion. Father Tryphon, abbot of a Russian Orthodox monastery in Washington State, recounts his battle with Starbucks over the monks’ production of a “Christmas Blend” coffee roast (the term had been trademarked to the corporation). San Francisco activist Mark Kasky won the right to bring a false-advertising lawsuit against Nike, which the company had tried to defend by claiming protection under the first amendment right of free speech. Essentially optimistic in their viewpoint, Cheatle and Wright fall squarely on the side of David taking on the corporate Goliath, issuing a celebratory acknowledgment of small acts of resistance and an impassioned call to action. "

-courtesy Whitney Museum of Art

Featuring:

  • Jim Hightower
  • Doris “Granny D” Haddock
  • Marc Kasky
  • Thom Hartmann
  • Naomi Klein
  • Jack Newfield
  • George Robinson
  • Father Tryphon
  • And many others

Crew:

  • Directed by Lori Cheatle & Daisy Wright
  • Produced by: Lori Cheatle
  • Co-producer: Virginia Williams
  • Edited by: Daisy Wright
  • Director of Photography: Brian Rigney Hubbard

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All content (c) Hard Working Movies and
(c) Lori Cheatle, except where noted.