86 minutes SDH Captioned Study Guide Grades 10-12, College, Adults Directed by Susan Saladoff Produced by Susan Saladoff, Carly Hugo, Alan Oxman DVD Purchase $350, Rent $95 US Release Date: 2013 Copyright Date: 2011 DVD ISBN: 1-93777-292-6 Subjects American Democracy American Studies Anthropology Business Practices Citizenship and Civics Contracts Elections Ethics Government Judicial System Law Marketing and Advertising Media Literacy Political Science Public Relations Social Justice Sociology Torts Awards and Festivals Sundance Film Festival HotDocs, Canadian International Documentary Film Festival Full Frame Documentary Film Festival Grand Jury Prize, Best Documentary Seattle International Film Festival The Documentary Everyone in America Should See, Traverse City Film Festival Grand Jury Award, Best Documentary Feature, Gasparilla International Film Festival AFI/Silverdocs Documentary Film Festival Los Angeles Film Festival Atlanta Film Festival Ashland Independent Film Festival Edmonton International Film Festival Nantucket Film Festival Sedona International Film Festival Provincetown International Film Festival Sarasota Film Festival DocuWest Film Festival Waterfront Film Festival Little Rock Film Festival |
Hot Coffee Is Justice Being Served? Tells the truth about the McDonald's hot coffee case and exposes the influence of corporate America on our civil justice system.
Note: There are two versions of this program on the same DVD: 86-minutes and 50-minutes. Seinfeld mocked it. Letterman put it on one of his Top Ten lists. More than 15 years later, the McDonald's coffee case continues to be cited as a prime example of how citizens use "frivolous" lawsuits to take unfair advantage of America's legal system. But is that an accurate portrayal of the facts? First-time filmmaker and former public interest lawyer Susan Saladoff uses the infamous legal battle that began with a spilled cup of coffee to investigate what's behind America's zeal for tort reform. By following four people whose lives were devastated by the attacks on our courts, this thought-provoking documentary challenges the assumptions Americans hold about "jackpot justice." Reviews "As a Torts professor, I was riveted to the screen as the movie illuminated many of the issues and injustices currently plaguing our tort system. The students very much enjoyed the real life stories that poignantly illustrated the legal concepts we had been studying. There was a buzz around campus for a couple weeks and the conversations in the hallways and in the classrooms revisited the heart-wrenching struggles that those featured in the movie were going through. This is a must-see movie for those interested in tort reform and legal justice." Jim Gash, Associate Dean for Student Life, Associate Professor of Law, Pepperdine University "Hot Coffee is a provocative exploration of Big Business' campaign to weaken the civil justice system. Those who believe the nation is suffering from frivolous lawsuits may discover that they were led to that view -- not by facts -- but by clever propaganda." Carl T. Bogus, Professor of Law, Roger Williams University, Author, Why Lawsuits Are Good for America "This is a film that every law student, and everyone else interested in our civil justice system, should see, think about, and discuss with others, ideally in a public event after just seeing the movie. While our civil justice system is the best in the world, Hot Coffee makes it clear that it is being threatened in very frightening ways. The issue for us all is, what can and should we do to see that justice is a reality and not just a slogan?" Alan B. Morrison, Associate Dean for Public Interest and Public Service Law, George Washington University "Hot Coffee serves as a wake-up call for Americans to question changes in the judicial process under the guise of tort reform before those changes destroy our system of access to justice." Reuben A. Guttman, Senior Fellow and Adjunct Professor of Law, Center for Advocacy and Dispute Resolution, Emory University "For two decades, there has been an attack leveled against our civil justice system, fueled in large part by the 'outrageous' verdict entered in the infamous McDonald's case. Hot Coffee levels the playing field by telling the true story behind this decision, highlighting the important role lawyers and our civil justice system play in insuring a safe and effective marketplace. This movie should be part of everyone's education." Richard M. Alderman, Interim Dean, Director of Consumer Law Center, Chair in Law, University of Houston, Author of Consumer Protection and the Law "Too often, people don't understand how little oversight exists on product design until they are injured and seek compensation for a poorly designed product. At that point, they realize how much the tort reform movement has eroded civil rights. Hot Coffee brings critically needed attention to this misunderstood and much maligned area of law, which was meant to protect Americans from the injurious consequences of poorly designed products. This superb movie should be seen by every US citizen." Lochlann Jain, Professor of Anthropology, Stanford University, Author, Injury: Design and Litigation in the United States "Hot Coffee is about the destruction of our Tort law -- there is nothing like it. A documentary about the lies that let to 'tort reform.'" Laura Nader, Professor of Sociocultural Anthropology, University of California - Berkeley, Author, Law, Culture, Society "Hot Coffee does an excellent job presenting their stories. There are also particularly strong women spokespeople and role models...A good choice for constitutional law or pre-law classes. This film would capture the interest of most students." Maggie Knapp, Trinity Valley School, School Library Journal "A stunning debut with the lively, lucid Hot Coffee, about the spin behind such notions as tort reform, frivolous lawsuits and jackpot justice. With its energetic pacing, bold visuals and the kind of narrative that sends audiences out of the theater thinking in a brand-new way about something they thought they understood, Hot Coffee deserves the kind of release enjoyed by An Inconvenient Truth and Food, Inc." Ann Hornaday, Washington Post "Saladoff...uses the McDonalds coffee case as the starting point and from there builds a strong case that tort reform, binding arbitration and non-economic damage caps subvert justice and benefit big business." Lisa Derrick, Firedoglake.com "Eye-opening indictment of the way big business spins the media." Variety "Entertaining, informative...vividly illuminating." Hollywood Reporter "Infuriating, shocking, riveting and one of the best legal documentaries we've seen in a long time." Kevin Jagernauth, IndieWire |