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The New Rulers of the World (Home Video Version)
For Personal Use Only

Award-winning journalist, John Pilger, investigates the realities of globalization by taking a close look at Indonesia.

A printer-friendly version of this page

53 minutes
Directed by Alan Lowery
Produced by Carlton International Media Ltd
Produced, Written and Presented by John Pilger



In order to examine the true effects of globalization, Pilger turns the spotlight on Indonesia, a country described by the World Bank as a model pupil until its globalized economy collapsed in 1998. The film examines the use of sweatshop factories by famous brand names, and asks some penetrating questions. Who are the real beneficiaries of the globalized economy? Who really rules the world now? Is it governments or a handful of huge companies? The Ford Motor Company alone is bigger than the economy of South Africa. Enormously rich men, like Bill Gates, have a wealth greater than all of Africa.

Pilger goes behind the hype of the new global economy and reveals that the divisions between the rich and poor have never been greater -- two thirds of the world's children live in poverty -- and the gulf is widening like never before.

The film looks at the new rulers of the world -- the great multinationals and the governments and institutions that back them -- the IMF and the World Bank. Under IMF rules, millions of people throughout the world lose their jobs and livelihood. The reality behind much of modern shopping and the famous brands is a sweatshop economy, which is being duplicated in country after country.

The film travels to Indonesia and Washington, asking challenging questions seldom raised in the mainstream media and exposing the scandal of globalization, including revealing interviews with top officials of the World Bank and the IMF.



Grade Level: 10-12, College, Adult
US Release Date: 2002     Copyright Date: 2001


Reviews
"In another in a long line of passionate, wide-ranging and informative reports, John Pilger examines globalization: a process which, he believes, enslaves the many in order to empower the few. It is a deeply impressive, informative, heartfelt piece of journalism, and it proves that the small screen still can, when it has a mind to, bring us the big picture."
Graham McCann, Financial Times

"Pilger's analysis is sophisticated, interweaving Cold War politics and the workings of the World Bank and the IMF, and shows how corporations such as Ford now have bigger economies than South Africa, and the way many countries have been turned into giant sweatshops."
Gerard Gilbert, The (London) Independent

"Globalization is a big subject to tackle and there's no doubt this latest film is a full meal, throwing a lot of factual information at the viewer. That it never feels overwhelming or unfocused testifies both to Pilger's film-making experience and to those political news instincts he developed at the Daily Mirror, in the days when the Mirror really mattered."
Kieron Corless, Time Out

"John Pilger is back with another quietly impassioned report on the insidious nature of globalization. His grilling of an IMF spokesman is beautifully understated, although it doesn't stop the man from spouting absolute rubbish. A must-see for those who think anti-capitalist demonstrations are led solely by thuggish anarchists."
Mary Novakovich, The (Manchester) Guardian

"Any new investigation by John Pilger is going to be an event, and rightly so as his brand of crusading journalism is so rare on the box today...In this compelling hour...he contends that the real power in today's global economy no longer resides with the governments but in the hands of a few huge multinationals...And watching him among the sweatshops of Indonesia, it's hard to disagree."
Jan Jurczak, Daily Express

"Even if you vehemently disagree with most of what John Pilger says, he puts forward a case that needs to be answered."
David Chater, The (London) Times

"A calm, carefully articulated account of the monstrous crimes perpetrated by the heroes of globalization."
Timothy McGettigan, Professor of Sociology, University of Southern Colorado

"A scathing portrait of the way Western commerce has taken over the economy of Indonesia and continues to maintain its grip in a way which prevents the country from ever rising above its poverty."
Doug Cummings, filmjourney.org


HOME VIDEO: PURCHASE ONLY
DVD $29.95
VHS $29.95


The New Rulers of the World (Home Video Version)


"A deeply impressive, informative, heartfelt piece of journalism." Graham McCann, Financial Times

Links
John Pilger's web site


Awards and Festivals
Special Award, Prix Leonardo
Silver Hugo, Chicago International Television Competition
Honorable Mention, Columbus International Film & Video Festival
MountainFilm, Telluride
Vermont International Film Festival
Global Justice Film Festival, Washington, DC
American Anthropological Association Conference
Taos Talking Picture Festival
Amnesty International Film Festival
Istanbul International Labor Film Festival

Related Titles

Inside Burma
John Pilger investigates the history and brutality of the military dictatorship in Burma.

Paying the Price
John Pilger exposes the devastating effect that UN sanctions had on the children of Iraq during the 1990s.

Invisible Garments: Expensive Soles
Nike and other multinationals are moving production to countries like Indonesia.

Life
30-part series that looks at the effect of globalization on individuals and communities around the world.

India Inhales
Activists combat tobacco companies that target India.

The Golf War
Globalization comes to a Philippine seaside community, which has to defend its ancestral lands against golf course development.

The Emperor's New Clothes
An impassioned look at the effects of NAFTA on workers in Canada, the US and Mexico.

Democracy à la Maude
A Canadian woman leads the fight against unjust corporate globalization, and for social justice.

The Human Race
Is the western model of global development sustainable in a finite environment?

Super-Companies
Multinational companies seldom take the needs of people or the environment into account.

Borderline Cases
The environmental impact of the 2,000 factories (maquiladoras) on the US-Mexico border.

Smiles
The struggle for greater democracy and free speech in Thailand.

Uranium
Native peoples pay the consequences of uranium mining.

Arrows Against the Wind
The Dani and the Asmat come face to face with the modern world in Irian Jaya.

Blowpipes and Bulldozers
The story of the Penan, a tribe of rainforest nomads in Borneo, as seen by Bruno Manser.

Lucia
A dramatic film about the cost of an oil spill to a fishing village in the Philippines.


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