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La corporación

Título original: The Corporation
  • 2003
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 25min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
22 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La corporación (2003)
Theatrical Trailer from Zeitgeist Films
Reproducir trailer1:54
9 videos
17 fotos
DocumentalHistoria

Analiza el concepto de corporación a lo largo de la historia reciente hasta su dominio actual.Analiza el concepto de corporación a lo largo de la historia reciente hasta su dominio actual.Analiza el concepto de corporación a lo largo de la historia reciente hasta su dominio actual.

  • Dirección
    • Mark Achbar
    • Jennifer Abbott
  • Guionistas
    • Joel Bakan
    • Harold Crooks
    • Mark Achbar
  • Elenco
    • Mikela Jay
    • Rob Beckwermert
    • Christopher Gora
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.0/10
    22 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Mark Achbar
      • Jennifer Abbott
    • Guionistas
      • Joel Bakan
      • Harold Crooks
      • Mark Achbar
    • Elenco
      • Mikela Jay
      • Rob Beckwermert
      • Christopher Gora
    • 150Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 51Opiniones de los críticos
    • 73Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 12 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total

    Videos9

    The Corporation
    Trailer 1:54
    The Corporation
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 0:50
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 4
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 0:50
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 4
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 2
    Clip 1:44
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 2
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 7
    Clip 0:39
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 7
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 0:34
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 1
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 5
    Clip 0:37
    The Corporation Scene: Scene 5

    Fotos17

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    Elenco principal91

    Editar
    Mikela Jay
    Mikela Jay
    • Self - Narrator
    • (voz)
    • (as Mikela J. Mikael)
    Rob Beckwermert
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Christopher Gora
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Nina Jones
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Richard Kopycinski
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Karen Lam
    Karen Lam
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Sean Lang
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Bert Phillips
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Diana Wilson
    • Actor - Dramatizations
    Jane Akre
    • Self - Investigative Reporter
    Ray Anderson
    • Self - CEO, Interface
    Joe Badaracco
    • Self - Professor of Business Ethics, Harvard Business School
    Maude Barlow
    Maude Barlow
    • Self - Chairperson, Council of Canadians
    Chris Barrett
    Chris Barrett
    • Self - Corporate Sponsored University Students
    Marc Barry
    • Self - Competitive Intelligence Professional
    Robert Benson
    • Self - Professor of Law, UCLA
    Elaine Bernard
    • Self - Executive Director of Trade Union Program, Harvard
    Edwin Black
    • Self - Author, IBM and the Holocaust
    • Dirección
      • Mark Achbar
      • Jennifer Abbott
    • Guionistas
      • Joel Bakan
      • Harold Crooks
      • Mark Achbar
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios150

    8.022.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    deastman_uk

    Working on the bottom line

    After a relatively straightforward start exploring the definition of incorporation, this documentary made some fairly meaty punches on its target material.

    With the exception of a few sentimental and outdated "the poor people fight back" strands, most of the attacks were well constructed. Beyond simply saying that to a corporation profit is everything, the more difficult case was made: that everything can be turned into a profit. And that includes life, death, and the truth.

    The depiction of the Corporation as a psychopath was used to link most of the material. The talking heads were usually on the money, including both Michael "9/11" Moore and Noam "Manafacturing Consent" Chomsky.

    But what the film does well was report specific cases that certainly included a few gems. An attempt to privatize water, IBM servicing Nazi accounting, an attempted coup in the US, Fox burying news and of course Monsanto being Monsanto. You couldn't make those guys up.

    The attempt to look at alternatives to the worst forms of Capitalism were not so successful. Right wing defenders of profit-at-all-cost use short sentences with single syllable words. The poor want to be rich. We make things you like. We don't care. Much of the left wing however, cannot counter this clarity.

    And the last frame had the ebullient Mr Moore telling us to get off the sofa and do something. Yeah, like vote for Bush again?
    8lawprof

    Well Done But Basically Preaching to the Converted: A Lost Opportunity

    Good documentaries have both a viewpoint and an agenda. They reflect the vision, politics, values and angst of the director(s). "The Corporation" meets those standard criteria and in an overlong movie it's Prosecution Exhibit A for an indictment of a) modern corporations, b) consumerism, c) disdain for the Earth and its bounty, d) globalization, e)sleek marketing and f) dishonest, money-grubbing media, the current Whores of Babylon. There's probably more but I was saturated long before the film ended.

    In terms of style, directors Jennifer Abbott and Mark Achbar have made a visually engrossing film with excellent interweaving of archival film with sound bites by noted academics as well as business executives. We get Noam Chomsky and Milton Friedman and many lesser lights. Michael Moore appears enough to seem more a director than an interviewee but some of his remarks, particularly at the end, are more insightful than much of what he opines on in his own films.

    Using story boards to announce different themes, "The Corporation" tells - very quickly and, indeed superficially - the history of the legal entity, what we in the law call the "Juridical Person," the modern huge, business creature. Its early history is quickly sketched, the complexities of the Anglo-American societies that spawned this economic model barely hinted at much less explained.

    For better or for worse, documentaries best make their argument through striking anecdotes and this movie is no exception. We see corporations engaged in behavior that wreaks havoc on health, deprives poverty-stricken citizens of poor countries of even minimal control of their lives and, of course directs our spending and leisure habits.

    But some scenes show corporate strategies as just plain silly as with a couple ambulating down an urban street, one telling the other how great a CD he's listening to happens to be. The idea is that passersby will become curious enough to buy the disc. I doubt this happens much but the use of shills goes back hundreds of years (ample evidence of their employment can be gleaned from Elizabethan literature) and it pales as a menace when juxtaposed to the true evils depicted in the documentary.

    Some very complex issues which few viewers are likely to know anything about are presented as proof that corporations are inherently driven solely by profit motives with no regard for other values. Particularly disturbing is the incarnation of the writings of an independent scholar named Black who claims that IBM was in sympathetic and knowing collusion with Nazi Germany to sell them embryonic computers (not mentioned by name but they were the Hollerith punch card machines) which then made expediting millions to their concentration camp murder feasible. This account has been discredited by most historians but the more serious and unmentioned reality is that the U.S. government knowingly permitted some American corporations to prepare to profit from a postwar world by maintaining ties with subsidiaries in Germany (the Bank for International Settlements is never mentioned: now THAT's a subject for a film).

    "The Corporation" returns often to the theme that this business entity is a "person" with constitutional rights ( declared a number of times as a sad fact of American law). In fact that's true but what is never explained is that investing corporations with an identity that is juridically recognized means that the entities - AND their assets - are amenable to every form of lawsuit from civil rights violations to environmental law accountability to - you name it. And corporations can be criminally charged and convicted. Yes, obviously they can't be jailed but the entity can be sentenced to remedial action, something that would be impossible if liability was limited to individuals who lack assets sufficient to cure major violations and, in any event, who surely could do nothing from jail or forced retirement.

    Where could Ralph Nader's crusade for safer cars have gone if General Motors and other corporations were not amenable to suit as legal persons? How much benefit derived for anti-smoking advocates from being able to arraign Big Tobacco in court (even if losses exceeded wins)? Why are women and minorities working for Big Business (or just trying to get in the door) less likely to be targeted for discrimination these days? You'd never know from this film.

    So we have a very mixed bag here - a well constructed polemic that is too one-sided if educating the audience rather than satisfying the converted was the goal. It was fun to sit in a packed theater in an epicenter of affluence - New York's Pleasantville in Westchester County - and note the righteous reaction of an audience of which I'd bet 95% own stock in major corporations.

    8/10
    alicecbr

    I'll never buy Hood's or Shaw's milk again.

    So we're getting used to antibiotics because of Corporate America's dairies pumping their sick cattle full of the stuff. I knew it intellectually but never realized it so viscerally as I did while watching these cows with their udders painfully distended and the pus coming out of them. Like a little pus with your milk? You're getting it.

    so it's onto soy milk or organic milk for me, from now on. That is but one of the life-changing experiences I had watching this movie. Of course, I already knew what tentacles Corporate America has around every area of our government including the media, but this movie just punched it up.

    It should make you angry. If not, your conscience has long been stilled by your big screen TV, your gas-guzzling SUV or your stock options. Probably won't show in most of your towns....too much of a threat to the corporations that are shown up in this show. Monsanto? Won't be buying any of their products anytime soon, and I already boycott Walmark, Penney's and the ubiquitous Barbie Doll. Pretty soon, I'll be eating nothing buy my own garden's products....a good idea, no? See the movie: find out how you're being shilled. You might even decide to take back your government from the corporations writing policy for Cheney and other Congressional prostitutes.
    10rci

    powerful & compelling

    The first time in a long time that I've seen a movie audience launch into applause at the end -- and I was as enthusiastic as everyone else.

    While quite long (2 hours, 45 minutes)this film piles detailed examples on top of interviews on top of documentary film clips. Liberally laced with interviews with folks like Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein and Michael Moore, it also includes insightful commentary from a (small) handful of liberated corporate executives.

    The sum total is a compelling story of the evil that can be and is done by and in the name of corporations. I say this as one who has worked in a corporate environment my entire career, and who for a very long time has had difficulty getting past the 'but these are almost all nice people -- I don't know any ogres out to intentionally rape & pillage' perspective.

    What I'm gradually wakening to is the realization that yes, the corporate structure is very efficient at doing what it's designed to do -- which unfortunately does not include taking social responsibility or the greater good into account. Instead it's ruthlessly focused on the bottom line, come hell (literally) or high water -- or polluted water.

    I highly recommend this film. I know I'll be going back for a second viewing -- there's that much content, that I know I didn't absorb it all the first time around.
    8gizmomogwai

    Often shocking and hits home

    Joel Bakan, who served as a clerk for Chief Justice Brian Dickson and advocated for human rights against governments, now takes aim at corporations in this documentary. On the way he gets a little help from friends like Naomi Klein and Michael Moore. The stuff exposed in the final product can be shocking and hits home even if the presentation is fairly one-sided. From stuff little-known like businessmen trying to overthrow Franklin Roosevelt and aiding Nazi death camps, to a reminder of Kathy Lee Gifford's sweatshops. It questions the ethics of applying patents on life and rain water. This is a story that needs to be heard, even if it needs to be balanced.

    I first saw most of the movie as part of a sociology course. We considered the concept of a corporation as a person, and how if it were a person it can fit the definition of a psychopath. While it may sound extreme to apply that label to men running businesses, sadly there is some truth to it. Even if this movie doesn't convince me corporations should be banned, it demonstrates why they should not have absolute power and personhood. The stuff about Bolivia having a revolt shows people being pushed can push back, and raises questions of how we may see more of that which is alarming from a security perspective. All of this is helped by use of metaphors and pop culture and the calm, female voice of the narrator. Everyone shaping a national economy should see this movie.

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    Inequality for All
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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      The current running time is distilled down from 450 hours of footage and 100 hours of interviews. The first cut ran to 33 hours.
    • Citas

      Robert Monks: Again and again we have the problem that whether you obey the law or not is a matter of whether it's cost effective. If the chance of getting caught and the penalties are less than it costs to comply, people think of it as just a business decision.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The credits display addresses and descriptions of related websites but they can also be found on the official website for the film.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Colpo al cuore: Morte non accidentale di un monarca (2009)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Bad Apple
      Written by David Wilcox

      Performed by David Wilcox

      Produced by Sadia Sadia (uncredited)

      Courtesy of EMI Music Canada

      Published by Teddy Bear Musical Publishing, A Division of Karl Music, Inc.

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is The Corporation?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 4 de junio de 2004 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Canadá
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Español
    • También se conoce como
      • The Corporation
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Vancouver, Columbia Británica, Canadá(Gas Town)
    • Productora
      • Big Picture Media Corporation
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 3,493,516
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 28,671
      • 6 jun 2004
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 4,605,682
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 25 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby SR
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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