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Manufactured Landscapes

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Manufactured Landscapes
Directed byJennifer Baichwal
Produced byNick de Pencier
Daniel Iron
Jennifer Baichwal
StarringEdward Burtynsky
Release date
Canada 2006
Running time
90 min
LanguagesEnglish
French

Manufactured Landscapes is an award winning documentary film about the work of photographer Edward Burtynsky.

Overview

Director Jennifer Baichwal followed Edward Burtynsky on a tour of Asia as he took large-scale photographs of giant industrial landscapes around the world. The film explores Burtynksy's work through interviews in the field and in the studio, detailed images of his photographs, and live filming of his subject matter. While the film clearly serves as a commentary on the impact of large scale industrialization on our natural world, Burtynsky and the film makers were careful neither to criticize, nor praise these developments.

Subject matter

Many of Burtynsky's photographs feature stunning and sometimes beautiful landscapes of areas completely transformed by human activity, which contrasts the adverse affects these landscapes represent.

The film examines Burtynsky's photographs of:

  • Factories in China
  • Garbage and recycling in China
  • Coal industry in China
  • Three Gorges Dam in China
  • Ship building in China
  • Ship breaking in Bangladesh
  • Mining around the world
  • The transformation of old neighborhoods in Shanghai

Awards

Critical reception

As of August 19, 2007, the film had an average score of 80% on Metacritic based on 15 reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes 83% of critics had given the film a "fresh" rating based on 47 reviews (39 fresh, 8 rotten).

Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly gave the film an "A" and said "The opening tracking shot through a Chinese factory where 23,000 employees make most of the world's irons is a stunner."[2] The review that appeared in the Boston Globe said the film "begs to be hung on the wall, studied, absorbed, and learned from" and also "Taken as a whole, Manufactured Landscapes is a mesmerizing work of visual oncology, a witness to a cancer that's visible only at a distance but entwined with the DNA of everything we buy and everywhere we shop." [3] Ken Fox of TV Guide gave the film four stars and said "Jennifer Baichwal's important, disquieting documentary offers the strongest reminder since Born into Brothels that art can serve a crucial, consciousness raising purpose.[4] Kenneth Baker of the San Francisco Chroniclesaid "the viewer soon realizes that [Baichwal] shares Burtynsky's astonishment and concern over the scale, tempo and irreversibility of postmodern humanity's global frenzy of production and consumption", and also that the film "leaves its audience with many troubling questions."[5] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune praised the opening shot, but said "the rest of director Baichwal's picture feels constrained and rather dutiful, no matter how passionate these people are about what they're observing."[6]

Previous work

Baichwal's previous film was another documentary about a noted photographer, Shelby Lee Adams, whose work was explored in the 2002 documentary The True Meaning of Pictures: Shelby Lee Adams' Appalachia. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "www.edwardburtynsky.com". Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  2. ^ Lisa Schwarzbaum (2007-06-20). "Manufactured Landscapes". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: Text "Entertainment Weekly" ignored (help); Text "Movie Review" ignored (help)
  3. ^ "An eloquent ecological warning". Boston Globe. 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  4. ^ Ken Fox. "Manufactured Landscapes Review". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: Text "TVGuide.com" ignored (help)
  5. ^ Kenneth Baker (2007-07-20). "FILM CLIPS / Also opening today". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  6. ^ Michael Phillips (2007-07-27). "Movie review: 'Manufactured Landscapes'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2007-08-19.