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Red Obsession

  • 2013
  • Not Rated
  • 1 घं 15 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
6.6/10
1.4 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Red Obsession (2013)
A documentary that chronicles the history and changing nature of the French wine industry.
trailer प्ले करें3:06
1 वीडियो
12 फ़ोटो
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अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThe great chateaux of Bordeaux struggle to accommodate the voracious appetite for their rare, expensive wines, which have become a powerful status symbol in booming China.The great chateaux of Bordeaux struggle to accommodate the voracious appetite for their rare, expensive wines, which have become a powerful status symbol in booming China.The great chateaux of Bordeaux struggle to accommodate the voracious appetite for their rare, expensive wines, which have become a powerful status symbol in booming China.

  • निर्देशक
    • David Roach
    • Warwick Ross
  • लेखक
    • David Roach
    • Warwick Ross
  • स्टार
    • Russell Crowe
    • Sara Eisen
    • Debra Meiburg
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
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    6.6/10
    1.4 हज़ार
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      • David Roach
      • Warwick Ross
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      • Warwick Ross
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      • Russell Crowe
      • Sara Eisen
      • Debra Meiburg
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    Trailer 3:06
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    Russell Crowe
    Russell Crowe
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    • (वॉइस)
    Sara Eisen
    Sara Eisen
    • Self
    Debra Meiburg
    Debra Meiburg
    • Self - Interviewee
    • निर्देशक
      • David Roach
      • Warwick Ross
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    3dylansgabriel

    "Red Obsession" turns out mostly shallow and pretentious.

    "Red Obsession" makes the viewer appreciate the true artistry involved in wine making, and the asomatous beauty involved in wine tasting (ordering wine at the Olive Garden is not wine tasting.) Drinking a good wine can be an orgasmic physical experience, as well as a genuinely spiritual one. Some of the interviewed eloquently describe an exquisite wine as an enduring experience.

    The scenic views of French countryside and century-old vineyards are astounding. "Red Obsession" has some of the most spectacular cinematography this reviewer has ever seen. This alone is a very good reason to watch.

    The film eventually moves into the current politics of the luxury wine industry. The epicentre of this business is currently China, which is now the largest importer of Bordeaux wines in the world. The rest of the film can be summarized in a sentence spoken by one of the commentators: "When the Chinese buy the wine, they buy the wine as a symbol of their status." The film's content, which includes exploration of the shifting market, and the changing production and consumption of premier château wines, was very informative and interesting to this uncultivated viewer. But the film is as untroubled as the well-off Chinese in it, who think nothing of dropping tens of millions of dollars buying wines, creating connoisseur clubs, or purchasing antiquated French chateaus.

    Overflowing with conceit and extravagance, "Red Obsession" turns out mostly shallow and pretentious. The film doesn't ask any questions, or challenge conventional thinking, or break any new ground. Yes it is a documentary, but it is not constructive filmmaking.

    screenplayisles.blogspot
    7Coolestmovies

    A documentary about a boom that was already going bust

    It was once said that when you were considered successful in China, you drove a German car, wore a Swiss watch and drank French wine. This documentary was release 13 years ago as I write this. It's now 2025. For China's then nouveau riche - who very likely remembered suffering through the brutal and austere decades of the Chinese Communist Party's 30-ish years of great leaps backward - the sudden and comparative (though far from total) freedom starting in the 1980's to get 'gloriously' rich resulted in the belief that there were no higher status symbols, no greater signifiers to the teeming masses of 'great unwashed' from which you sprang but far exceeded, than the luxury European products many Chinese could only dream about for decades, if they were even allowed to know they existed at all.

    Their love of wine, long term, was to be the undoing of a great many of them and to that I can only say "Good!". That has nothing to do with the mainland Chinese as a people, and much more to do with Mainland China as an unstable political construct that often backtracks on what few real freedoms it gives its people. This has become all the more apparent in the decade leading up to this year, 2025.

    The arrogance of then-contemporary (2011-ish) mainland Chinese elites participating in this documentary is both honest and off the charts, but this was probably much less apparent at the time of the film's release because China was indeed on an upward trajectory. Until it wasn't.

    Now, in 2025, many of the film's subjects have been reminded of the major difference between China (and now once-free Hong Kong, sadly) and longstanding western democratic cultures: when the Chinese Communist Party decides the good times are over, they're over for everyone. Period. Full stop.

    When the lust in China for French wine was at its peak, Chinese entrepreneurs bought over 200 French chateaus because their undisguised greed convinced them that the best way to supply what they wrongly predicted would be the exploding China market for authentic French wine was to buy the wineries themselves and ship the bulk of the product to China from there. One such sucker, Richard Shen, claims in the film that the wines from his Bordeaux estate were only getting better because "all the best people work for me." Another Chinese interview subject says that in a few decades (after 2012), the entire world's production will not meet the demands of China. Narrator Russell Crowe - presumably hired because of his role in Ridley Scott's 2006 French vineyard-set drama A GOOD YEAR - even says at one point that in the next four decades, "China is set to become the world's largest producer of wine." On that note, another entrepreneur, who's never been to France, claims that the soil in the China's barren, isolated northwestern region of Ningxia can cultivate grapes equal to Bordeaux because then soil is apparently similar. He believes if the French can succeed over centuries, the Chinese can parrot that success in a few years through sheer willpower. Moments later we see stewards at another winery in the region explaining how much harsher the environment is there, and how difficultly the vines must be handled. One brief upside: a Chinese wine is shown winning the prestigious 2011 Decanter Award for the first time.

    To say that virtually nothing predicted in this film came to pass is an understatement, but one cannot blame the filmmakers. RED OBSESSION actually does end on a down note, circa 2012, when the bloom was just beginning to come off the rose after a decade-long boom in steamroller Chinese affluence (and the accompanying attitude) that many assumed culminate with China taking over the world.

    Alas, it was all downhill to this day. The wine situation is just the tip of the iceberg.

    ---------

    From a 2025 article on Luxuo:

    ---------

    "As China loses its love for imported wine, hundreds of Chinese-owned vineyards are sold at knockdown prices. For many investors based in Beijing and Shanghai, the prospect of making a significant profit has turned sour. Several causes are driving the sell-off. Tighter capital controls make it harder for the Chinese to spend money overseas, and a domestic crackdown on corruption has reduced demand for pricey presents.

    Nine châteaux near Bordeaux - valued at around EUR 35.5 million - were seized by France in May from a Chinese entrepreneur who had been found guilty of misappropriating Chinese state funds and money laundering."

    ---------

    And here's a snippet of a 2025 article on The Drinks Business website:

    ---------

    "Michael Baynes of Vineyards Bordeaux, who sold 12 wineries last year, said cultural misunderstandings contributed to many of the struggles. In China, he said, seeking advice is often seen as a sign of weakness, leading some buyers to make poorly informed decisions.

    With the market now saturated, vineyard prices have plummeted. Vineyards Bordeaux reports that average prices per hectare have fallen from around 55,000 euros in 2000 to as little as 10,000 euros today.

    Additional pressures, including Chinese currency controls limiting overseas transfers and French banks tightening loans to small vineyards, have led to what Baynes described as a "fire sale". He said that by the end of 2024, around 400 Bordeaux vineyards were on the market - double the usual number - with about 70% classified as distressed sales needing urgent maintenance."

    ---------

    And from the Swiss finance site Finews, also in 2025, which piggybacks on reporting from Luxuo quoted above:

    ---------

    "The acquisition spree began in the late 2000s, as affluent Chinese buyers sought to capitalize on the booming demand for Bordeaux wine in their home market. Over 200 vineyards were purchased, often rebranded with auspicious names like «Gold Rabbit.» Investors, driven by China's growing appetite for red wine, hoped to secure both financial returns and social prestige.

    However, this enthusiasm has faded dramatically. The austerity measures introduced by Chinese President Xi Jinpingin 2013 curbed extravagant spending, and subsequent capital controls further restricted outbound investments. By 2017, Beijing's tighter regulations had crippled many Chinese-owned vineyards' operations.

    Meanwhile, China's wine consumption has steadily declined, dropping by 25 percent in 2023 alone, according to the International Organization of Vine and Wine.

    Many of these estates are now returning to the market. Château Latour-Laguens, one of the first Bordeaux properties bought by Chinese investors in 2008, exemplifies the downturn. Initially purchased for 2 million euros, the estate is now listed for just 150,000 euros, its vines abandoned and buildings in disrepair, as «LUXUO» notes.

    French Investors Reclaiming Territory Other properties face similar challenges. Labor disputes, cultural clashes, and absentee ownership have plagued operations, leading to unpaid wages and management controversies. A local union representative noted that Chinese proprietors often lacked the trust needed to work effectively with French employees, compounding operational difficulties."

    ---------

    Back to me . . .

    So here we are, in 2025, and we can see that the boom has been going bust in China for years now. And honestly, it's probably for the best because of the effects of the disastrous culture clash illustrated in the quoted material above. The cultures are simply too far apart. As one French expert notes in the film, for the French winemakers the goal is PLEASING those who would drink their wares, regardless of the price (even though that's obviously a nice bonus). For the mainland Chinese, the explosion in interest in wine was only ever about status - just like those Ferraris and Swiss watches - and IMPRESSING those around you with your 'western' tastes and pretensions. The CCP put paid to that kind of ambition, affluence, and influence in relatively short order, as it was bound to do. That's the harsh reality learned by the vast majority of 'wine entrepreneurs' for whom status was everything, and whose high-minded adventures depicted in this documentary turned into folly in the years since its release.
    9nando1301-1

    To be seen while sipping red wine

    This is a documentary for wine lovers. Beer drinkers need not apply.

    The film is tastefully done, great photography, beautiful soundtrack. Needs to be watched with a glass of red wine in hand, as it really whets your appetite.

    Should it go deeper into the subject? Should it explain that the great French Wine Blight did NOT make the 1855 classification obsolete, because the vines were grafted to Chilean roots (resistant to the phylloxera) imported hastily in thousands, to save them (not only in France, but in other parts of Europe too)?

    Maybe. That would have made for a slightly longer film, perhaps more thrilling (Will the vines be completely lost? Who could save them? Wait! Up in the sky: it's a bird... it's a plane... No, it's super-vine! Actually, it was "la super viña", from Chile).

    But it would have been a different film, missing the elegant balance of this one.

    Perhaps this film's success will spur a sequel: "Red Obsession 2 - Attack of the insects from Hell". It will need a different soundtrack (by Hans Zimmer?) and a different narrator; Russell Crowe is too mellow for that!
    8planktonrules

    It's no longer about enjoying the wine...

    I was only mildly interested in watching this documentary and turned it on expecting very little. After all, I rarely ever drink French wines and just don't have much interest in them. However, I soon realized that in many ways the film isn't really about wines at all- -it's all a metaphor for the sudden and very dramatic rise in the Chinese economy and their subsequent buying power. It also, in many ways, is much like the entrance of Americans into the world economy in the 20th century--when some folks were more interested in spending their money on some hot commodity instead of what is quality. In the film, the Chinese elite seem too interested in specific famous labels as opposed to actually DRINKING the wines-- and as a result of folks stockpiling the wines and paying top dollar, the wine prices on the 'best' wines are astronomical and no one can afford to drink them! All in all, a fascinating film that really gets you to think.
    10jeff-cutler-ca

    This movie is not about wine, despite what you think

    You might think the movie is about wine but it's not. It's about the transformation of China and it uses the dusty old traditional wineries of France to highlight just what is going on. The Chinese became obsessed with fine vintage wines, in particular the Rothchild Lafite Bordeaux wines. You don't have to be a wine lover to enjoy the movie. The one quote I will always remember, that the Chinese have endured the cultural revolution which is like going to hell and coming back alive. They have endured living like peasants for decades and now that they are not, they want to live it up like a sir. The picture of China that is presented in the film is one that is super modern, trendy, and really fast paced. Money is everywhere. But this is a double edged sword, as you will find out in the movie. They could have swapped Lafite for BMW's or iPhones, but the Lafite is an excellent symbol of fine old stuffy European tradition coming head on to the Chinese economic juggernaut. This movies picks a single story to convey the seismic shift in economic pull that has happened in the last decade.

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    By what name was Red Obsession (2013) officially released in India in English?
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