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The House I Live In

  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 1 घं 38 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.9/10
5.4 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
The House I Live In (2012)
An investigative look at America's war on drugs and its impact on the criminal justice system, with a focus on the experiences of Nannie Jeter, a former employee of filmmaker Eugene Jarecki's family.
trailer प्ले करें2:19
3 वीडियो
11 फ़ोटो
Drug CrimeCrimeDocumentary

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंFrom the dealer to the narcotics officer, the inmate to the federal judge, a penetrating look inside America's criminal justice system, revealing the profound human rights implications of U.... सभी पढ़ेंFrom the dealer to the narcotics officer, the inmate to the federal judge, a penetrating look inside America's criminal justice system, revealing the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy.From the dealer to the narcotics officer, the inmate to the federal judge, a penetrating look inside America's criminal justice system, revealing the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy.

  • निर्देशक
    • Eugene Jarecki
  • लेखक
    • Eugene Jarecki
    • Christopher St. John
  • स्टार
    • Eugene Jarecki
    • David Simon
    • Shanequa Benitez
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.9/10
    5.4 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Eugene Jarecki
    • लेखक
      • Eugene Jarecki
      • Christopher St. John
    • स्टार
      • Eugene Jarecki
      • David Simon
      • Shanequa Benitez
    • 30यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 48आलोचक समीक्षाएं
    • 77मेटास्कोर
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
    • पुरस्कार
      • 4 जीत और कुल 3 नामांकन

    वीडियो3

    Theatrical Version
    Trailer 2:19
    Theatrical Version
    The House I Live In
    Trailer 1:25
    The House I Live In
    The House I Live In
    Trailer 1:25
    The House I Live In
    The House I Live In
    Promo 2:18
    The House I Live In

    फ़ोटो10

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    टॉप कलाकार61

    बदलाव करें
    Eugene Jarecki
    Eugene Jarecki
    • Self - Narrator…
    David Simon
    David Simon
    • Self - Creator, The Wire
    Shanequa Benitez
    • Self
    William Julius Wilson
    • Self - Harvard University
    • (as Prof. William Julius Wilson)
    Glendon Goldsboro
    • Self - Providence Police
    • (as Lt. Glendon Goldsboro)
    Fabio Zuena
    • Self - Providence Narcotics
    David Kennedy
    • Self - John Jay College of Criminal Justice
    Michael Correia
    • Self - Commanding Officer, Narcotics
    • (as Lt. Michael Correia)
    Charles Bowden
    Charles Bowden
    • Self - Investigative Reporter
    Gabor Maté
    Gabor Maté
    • Self - Physician, Addiction Expert
    • (as Dr. Gabor Maté)
    Mark W. Bennett
    • Self - U.S. Federal Judge
    • (as Hon. Mark Bennett)
    Maurice Haltiwanger
    • Self - ID# 03678-029
    Jim K. McGough
    • Self - Maurice's Lawyer
    • (as Jim McGough)
    Eric Franklin
    • Self - Lexington Corrections Center
    • (as Warden Eric Franklin)
    Mike Carpenter
    • Self - Chief of Security, Lexington Corrections
    Michelle Alexander
    Michelle Alexander
    • Self - Author, The New Jim Crow
    Charles Ogletree
    Charles Ogletree
    • Self - Harvard University
    • (as Prof. Charles J. Ogletree)
    Anthony Johnson
    • Self - ID# 06263-082
    • निर्देशक
      • Eugene Jarecki
    • लेखक
      • Eugene Jarecki
      • Christopher St. John
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
    • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    9valis1949

    Mama Tried

    THE HOUSE I LIVE IN (dir. Eugene Jarecki)

    America has more of its citizens behind bars than in any other nation on the planet, and we presently have more Blacks incarcerated than were slaves in the Confederate States of America during the 1850's. And, America's misguided approach to the issue of illegal drugs is the single most important reason why so many of us are in prison.

    These are only a couple of startling revelations from Eugene Jarecki's riveting documentary about America's terribly misguided War On Drugs. Clearly we have chosen to solve a health issue by creating a ridiculous legal and political policy based on an oxymoron called, 'the criminal justice system'. Racial scapegoating and a system based on 'prisons for profit' have allowed us to spend billions, yet more people use illegal drugs today than when the drug war first began. And, the quality of these drugs is infinitely superior.

    No one, not the authorities or the criminals, seem to be satisfied with the status quo, and readily admit that the whole affair is an abject failure. But, the film shows how this suicidal social policy remains locked in place with no end in sight. Politicians campaign on making this nation drug free, and addiction rates soar and we can't seem to build jails quickly enough to fill them.

    If there was ever a solution that was immeasurably worse than the problem, it is The War On Drugs. ABSOLUTE MUST SEE
    rogerdarlington

    A must-see documentary

    In 40 years, of America's 'war on drugs', more than 45 million arrests have been made. The approach has made the United States the world's largest jailer with almost 2.3 million individuals incarcerated. This means that the USA has the highest documented incarceration rate in the world with about 1% of all adults in jail. African Americans comprise less than 14% of the US population but almost 40% of those in prison. Hispanic Americans comprise just over 16% of the US population but around 20% of those in prison. African American males are jailed at about six times the rate of white males and three times the rate of Hispanic males.

    Against this background, Eugene Jarecki has written, produced and directed this striking documentary examining the impact of the war on drugs in America. Starting with the black woman who was his childhood nanny, he interviews an eclectic cast of characters with different experiences of the problem: the drug dealer, the policeman, the judge, the prison guard, the life prisoner with no chance of parole, and – most eloquent of all – the creator of the television series "The Wire".

    Until recently, the drug problem has been seen by many Americans as a black and brown issue and the strong emphasis on enforcement measures, with a growing use of mandatory minimum sentences, has led to a swollen ethnic prison population that, for many whites, has swept the problem off the streets and out of sight. But the availability of different drugs and the loss of manufacturing jobs has led to more white, working class men being caught up in this destruction of both personalities and communities. So, at its core, this is not an issue of ethnicity but one of poverty.

    The film argues that the policies of the last four decades have failed and need to be fundamentally rethought. Drug use should be considered as less an issue of criminal justice and more a matter of public health. Many drug users are not evil or selfish but victims of poverty and deprivation who are trying to find some income where there is little employment and some solace when life is so miserable.

    This is a stunning documentary that raises profound issues – and not just for Americans. It will not be an easy film to see at the cinema, so catch it on television (as I did) or buy or rent it.
    10winston9109

    The Slow-Motion Holocaust

    If you've been a student of most public schools you've learned about slavery.

    There's a lyric I remember that says "I hate it when they tell us how far we came to be - as if our peoples' history started with slavery." Well, the history of subjugating minorities has not ENDED with slavery either, and retrospective condemnation of racism serves the purpose to perpetuate the racism embedded and invested in our country today.

    The most important mistake is to confuse failure with success in regards to the apparent shortcomings of our establishment. I again use the example of public schools because the recent documentary "Waiting for Superman" did a fantastic job in addressing the "failures" of schools to educate children. It takes a book like James Lowen's Lies My Teacher Told Me to recognize the grand success of our school's indoctrination process: to teach obedience, not intelligence. It takes a documentary like The House I Live In to vocalize the airtight success of our administration in conducting the 41 years' drug war.

    Logic should compute. If more money has been spent (a trillion dollars since the '70s,) the prison population has skyrocketed (2.4 million people incarcerated) and no progress has been made in keeping drugs off the streets, (similarly with our schools, with reform after reform we continue to perform beneath the feet of most industrialized countries,) you have to start looking at things a little differently. It is hard to see the exit of the maze when walking within its walls. This documentary helps to see things from the outside.

    This film brings to light a lot of revealing facts that have been swept under the rug, like how opium wasn't an issue until Chinese started climbing the success latter in San Francisco, or how the police in border states can directly siphon the money from drug busts to reward their outfit. Mostly, it encourages a comparison between the way minorities have been apprehended with drug abuse and the apprehension of whites (who hold equal if not higher drug abuse statistics but make up a minority of the prison population.) And it encourages comparison between past, mass scale subjugation (often with eventual extermination) and, to quote the film, the slow-motion holocaust happening in our own country.

    It recognizes the drug epidemic as an economic issue and a medical issue, not a racial issue. It recognizes the drug WAR as the glaring rash of vibrant racism, and the brutal front of a class war in a society where profits come first, human beings second. More to this point, it eludes to the country's prime motivation, net gain and increased GDP, and the plethora of companies from Sprint Mobile to GM to privatized prisons such as CCA, all of whom depend on the drug war to maintain stock value.

    To quote ousted investigative journalist and ex-LAPD narcotics officer Michael Ruppert, "A snake eating its own tail is not nutritious."

    Though it is outside the periphery of the film's focus and beyond the pale even for a documentary of this substance, the issue of international drug trafficking, and facilitation it has received, at times, from both the financial sector and intelligence agency of our country, was never brought to light in this film. Despite whether this topic is to be written off as conspiracy theory or submitted for further analysis, a film that introduces our economy's dependence on drug dependence and the targeting of minorities in an everlasting drug war, has a duty to at least address the controversy. I suggest raising the question on discussion boards and at Q&As, as my screening was lucky enough to have.

    We live in a country that is infested with racism, now as much as any other time. Our economy depends on it, and the drug war has fertilized it. It is time to end it.
    10zippyflynn2

    "Free" Enterprise at It's Finest

    What's really fueling this law and order hysteria and the draconian prison sentences for relatively minor, innocuous and even non-existent "crimes" is the extraordinarily profitable Prison for Profit system. What's interesting and extremely frightening is most Americans are oblivious to it. Combine this with a large number of the public being largely uneducated and on a continual sadistic hunt for scapegoats, those who profiteer on the modern day slave trade have a willing public as unwitting accomplices.

    It's interesting the director, Eugene Jarecki, also did "Why We Fight", one of the best documentaries to expose the crimes being committed by the blood money Military Industrial Complex. The public is also largely oblivious to that evil profiteering monster and also happily supports it to the point it thinks murdering and dying for it is a good thing. Jarecki makes some of the most important and enlightening documentaries of today. It's an alarming shame and tragedy that the predominately ignorant and not very mentally healthy general public aren't watching them, let alone able to comprehend how it hurts everyone except the bank accounts of sociopathic "business" men and women.

    Perhaps the common denominator is the same fuel that's driving half of the present day voters in the Presidential election: hatred and the eternal search for scapegoats. It would make an excellent documentary to tie these core driving forces together, a task I think Mr. Jarecki is capable of doing well. It probably won't make much of an impact beyond preaching to the choir but then again none of his other fine offerings have fared much better and those are still greatly appreciated by thoughtful and humane audiences.
    10jason-leonidas1984

    Best Drug and Prison Documentary I Have Ever Seen

    This needs to be seen by every law officer, every judge, every college student and beyond. This is a VERY powerful documentary that doesn't just paint a black and white picture telling us that drugs are acceptable or that drugs are bad, it talks about the HUNDREDS of elements which make up the complex drug and prison system we know of today.

    Some of the top minds in the industry on both sides give the best and most insightful talks, this has really been an eye opening film for me.

    I wish I could mass produce this DVD for free and mail it to every citizen of the US. We need to change this system, it's broken and heading down a very scary path. Most people think that drugs and prisons don't affect them so why bother with the issue, you couldn't be any more wrong. Thousands of times a day the authorities are searching people and seizing property without due process, many times never finding anything. A man was killed after a raid and nothing was found. This IS RELEVANT TO ALL CITIZENS OF America. The Constitution is our savings grace, don't let it burn to ash along with your freedom.

    Please watch this, even if you don't agree with everything, I feel like you can still learn something and apply it to your community and the ballet box to make a positive change in the right direction.

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    • भाव

      Herself - Author, The New Jim Crow: You know, in any war, you've got to have an enemy, and when you think about impact, particularly on poor people of color, there are more African-Americans under correctional control today in prison or jail, on probation or parole, than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began. And that's something we haven't been willing to look in the mirror and ask ourselves, "what's really going on?"

    • कनेक्शन
      Edited into Independent Lens: The House I Live In (2013)
    • साउंडट्रैक
      Grandma's Hands
      Written by Bill Withers

      Published by Songs of Universal, Inc. on behalf of Interior Music Corp.

      Performed by Bill Withers

      Courtesy of Columbia Records

      By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing

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    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल18

    • How long is The House I Live In?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

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    By what name was The House I Live In (2012) officially released in Canada in English?
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