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The Union: The Business Behind Getting High

  • 2007
  • 1 h 44 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,2/10
7,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
The Union: The Business Behind Getting High (2007)
Trailer for The Union: The Business Behind Getting High
Reproduzir trailer2:54
1 vídeo
4 fotos
Documentário

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBC's illegal marijuana trade industry has evolved into a business giant, dubbed by some involved as 'The Union', Commanding upwards of $7 billion Canadian annually. With up to 85% of 'BC Bud... Ler tudoBC's illegal marijuana trade industry has evolved into a business giant, dubbed by some involved as 'The Union', Commanding upwards of $7 billion Canadian annually. With up to 85% of 'BC Bud' being exported to the United States, the trade has become an international issue. Follow... Ler tudoBC's illegal marijuana trade industry has evolved into a business giant, dubbed by some involved as 'The Union', Commanding upwards of $7 billion Canadian annually. With up to 85% of 'BC Bud' being exported to the United States, the trade has become an international issue. Follow filmmaker Adam Scorgie as he demystifies the underground market and brings to light how a... Ler tudo

  • Direção
    • Brett Harvey
  • Roteiristas
    • Brett Harvey
    • Adam Scorgie
  • Artistas
    • Adam Scorgie
    • Chris Bennett
    • Steve Bloom
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    8,2/10
    7,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Brett Harvey
    • Roteiristas
      • Brett Harvey
      • Adam Scorgie
    • Artistas
      • Adam Scorgie
      • Chris Bennett
      • Steve Bloom
    • 12Avaliações de usuários
    • 5Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 vitórias e 2 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    The Union: The Business Behind Getting High
    Trailer 2:54
    The Union: The Business Behind Getting High

    Fotos3

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal43

    Editar
    Adam Scorgie
    Adam Scorgie
    • Self - Host
    Chris Bennett
    • Self - Author & Former 'Pot TV' Manager
    Steve Bloom
    • Self - Former Editor, High Times
    Renee Bojee
    • Self - Activist
    Neil Boyd
    • Self - Professor of Criminology, Simon Fraser University
    George Bush
    George Bush
    • Self
    • (cenas de arquivo)
    George W. Bush
    George W. Bush
    • Self
    • (cenas de arquivo)
    Larry Campbell
    • Self - Mayor of Vancouver, 2002-2005
    • (as Senator Larry Campbell)
    Rielle Capler
    • Self - Policy Analyst - BC Compassion Club Society
    Tommy Chong
    Tommy Chong
    • Self - Comedian
    Jack A. Cole
    • Self - Director of LEAP and Former Undercover Narcotics Agent
    John Conroy
    • Self - Criminal Defense Lawyer
    Greg Cooper
    • Self - Multiple Sclerosis & Ataxia Sufferer
    Stephen Easton
    • Self - Professor of Economics, Simon Fraser University
    Marc Emery
    • Self - Seed Retailer & Activist
    Lester Ginspoon
    Lester Ginspoon
    • Self - Professor Emeritus, Harvard Medical School
    • (as Dr. Lester Grinspoon)
    Paul Hornby
    • Self - Biochemist & Human Pathologist
    • (as Dr. Paul Hornby)
    James Hudson
    • Self - Professor Emeritus, University of British Columbia
    • (as Dr. James Hudson)
    • Direção
      • Brett Harvey
    • Roteiristas
      • Brett Harvey
      • Adam Scorgie
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários12

    8,27.8K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9StevePulaski

    When will the caring cease?

    Before watching this film, I considered myself politically neutral in the ongoing debate about the benefits and harmfulness of marijuana use. If it's legalized, whatever; I won't use it. If it's kept illegal, I'm not losing any sleep, I thought. One of the debates that becomes nudged into the foreground when discussing marijuana legalization is do laws making drugs illegal escalate the use of said drugs or decrease them? I believe they do. I know more people in my life that smoke marijuana than are bullied at school. I can say with almost complete confidence that marijuana and alcohol use are more of a problem than bullying at suburban high schools. Which brings me to my first question; can the two be helping each other?

    The Union: The Business Behind Getting High opens with a four minute history of cannabis in America. We learn that cannabis, also called hemp or industrial hemp (the kind of hemp you can not get "high" from), was the largest crop in America up until around 1937. It was the most durable, robust fiber the world has ever known. It was used predominately in paper, medicine, fabrics, and lighting oil, and the very first marijuana/hemp law ever passed through legislation demanded farmers to use it for its commonality and reliability. Even the paper the Declaration of Independence is printed on is hemp paper; the kind of paper that, through centuries, does not yellow and does not destroy or lessen forest-count in the United States.

    But back to the history of the plant. In the mid-1930's, something called "yellow journalism" began to take effect on the American people. It was right around the time World War II and the Holocaust began to come up, as well, so the form of persuading the public without much substance and factual evidence, also known as propaganda, became more apparent in the life of not only Germany and parts of Europe, but the United States as well. When the 1936, notoriously lampooned film Reefer Madness, a completely heavy-handed and preachy film used as a scare-tactic for teens and marijuana use, was released, the government began acting on the production and use of hemp. The 1937 Marijuana Tax Act made it so using hemp would implement a heavy tax on farmers, to the point where other resources such as cotton were looked at as a substitute. Marijuana prices climbed, you needed a stamp to grow it - which the government wasn't giving out - and thus, by 1948, hemp and marijuana were illegal for almost no reason at all.

    This brings us to the question of the legitimacy and the success of prohibition of drugs in the United States; does it really work or does it erect greater, more impenetrable problems? When alcohol was outlawed in the United States, speakeasies became more popular, organized crime by several names like Al Capone and Lucky Luciano were turning up everywhere, and the ability to sell alcohol for record prices was astronomical. If one were to do roughly fifteen minutes of genuine research on marijuana prohibition in the United States, the facts are there and the effects are similar. By closing something off to the public, you open a whole new world where crime and lawlessness can take place, and prices can be artificially inflated by the seller, who makes 100% profit on something you were too stupid to see the benefits in.

    The Union boldly destroys most of the rumors about marijuana use, populated by the ignorant and uninformed, by using cold, hard facts. For example, the idea that marijuana kills brain cells or stunts them in any way is completely false. A study involving monkeys was conducted, where the monkeys ingested marijuana and not only was brain cell loss apparent, but death wasn't too far away either. Why was that? The monkeys wore gas masks and injected with a large amount of marijuana, that smoking several joints at a time wouldn't equate to, to the point where they died of suffocation.

    The film also brings up the very rational argument of questioning the legality of tobacco/nicotine/alcohol products, substances that have proved to be addictive, lethal, and cancerous, but not marijuana. So, it just leads us to the question that if the U.S. government wants so badly to protect its citizens from doom and uncertain turmoil, why are they paying money to restrict a plant with proved health benefits, untold material benefits, and one that has shown to be relatively harmless compared to legal pharmaceuticals? The simple answer is marijuana's naturalism. Because the government has the pharmaceutical corporations in their back pocket, both institutions are well aware that the legalization of marijuana would lead to record-low profits and a lesser dependency on one of the most profitable divisions in history. Why pay astronomically high prices for ambiguous medicines with side effects quite possibly worse than what you have when there's a natural drug you can grow, without fear of legal trouble or persecution, for pennies on the dollar? The answer is simple and rational and that's exactly what the corporations and the government want to steer the American people away from.

    Unfortunately, this will likely be a film that is standing inside an empty room with a high-auditory echo, with the only ones picking up its messages being those who do not need to hear old evidence and reiterated points for the umpteenth time. This is a film that will inevitably preach to the choir, the people its already had on its side. Those who need to seek this film out are the on-the-fencers, like I was, and those who have long been socially ignorant to the concept of marijuana, assuming its illegal status is for a justifiable reason.
    10Midnight_Gypsi

    A real eye-opener

    I'm not a pot smoker. In fact, I've never even tried it. People tend to always assume I'm a complete pothead; especially when first meeting me. My good friends and I now just all agree that I must have a pothead's personality or something, heh.

    Just maybe about a year ago, give or take, I was completely against the good stuff. I still believed what I had "learned" in D.A.R.E., telling me that you could overdose from your first puff (seriously, our police guy told us this, lol). I thought it was more likely to cause lung cancer, proved to kill braincells, would make me mentally disabled, become self-destructive, etc. I thought that weed was as bad as heroin, simply because I was constantly hearing about how bad it is and how it'll screw your life up. I mean, I honestly thought that people who wanted medicinal marijuana just wanted to get stoned - thankfully, I know better now.

    My opinion starting changing about about a year ago, when I read an article that suggested that weed could actually help treat a physical disability my mother suffers with. This made me curious, and I quickly began doing a ton of research. Eventually, I decided to watch "The Union" after seeing a few people comment about it being a great documentary to get information from.

    By the time I watched it, I was already turning towards pro-marijuana legalization, and this documentary helped me get over any doubt. They give a lot of information, and information that is worth knowing. Looking back to a year ago, before starting my research and before watching the documentary, I can't believe how ignorant I was. I can't believe the stereotypes and judgements I held while completely misinformed.

    Now, I know better. I'm not a pot smoker; I've never even touched it, but to me, that just shows that it doesn't take a complete pothead to realize that it should be made legal. Now, when I get the chance, I correct people's statements and misinformations about marijuana and I've provided several people with better information and I've recommended this very documentary to a few people.

    I think the main reason I held such hatred towards the plant before being properly informed was because when my older sister was a teen, she became very self-destructive and caused a lot of drama and pain within the family, and at that time she did get caught smoking weed, and I associated her behaviour with it.

    My mom, who also used to be completely dead-set against weed, is not as against it as before since I've given her information. Although she's not willing on trying it yet and still a little sceptical, she's much more open to the possibility of trying to get a doctor's recommendation for it than she would've been otherwise. She would qualify for it, and it's legal here if you've got a doctor's recommendation. I want to get her to watch this (and a couple other documentaries, but mostly this one) in hopes that she'll at least give it a go and hopefully be able of decreasing her medication intake (She needs to take a lot on a daily basis, some of which seem kinda sketchy.)

    So in conclusion, I recommend this to anyone and everyone; it's a real eye-opener and very informative.
    10vivoenelcampo

    Masterpiece yet pretty much unknown to the general public

    First of all, be warned, i am a pot lover, stoner and marijuana legalization advocate. Also i'm a well educated fourth year law student, with deep knowledge in history, mathematics, politics, and law. That duality that some people cant understand, and believe impossible is exactly what this film shows, am from Chile so my English may not be perfect, please spare me. Everyone, pro-legalization anti-legalization and even those who don't care should watch this film, the sheer amount of backup information is astonishing, everything that is said in the movie is accompanied by a source, so the movie presents an undeniable truth.

    That would be OK for most documentaries but this one goes further, its is fast paced, has a great soundtrack (specially if you're watching it high, treats a great variety of subjects, history, medical dangers, medical benefits, legislation, etc.

    Be warned, it will change your point of view, if you are a pro-legalization it will strength it, if you are close-minded it will open it, so be ready to learn the truth, and open your mind in a heavily entertaining way.
    10autumn_stars

    Blew My Mind

    I was on the edge of my seat the entire documentary. Incredibly well-made, enjoyed the fast pace & entertaining snippets. Loaded with both fun and infuriating facts.

    Prior to watching this movie, I was already pro-legalization, although a few short years ago I thought marijuana was a very bad drug indeed. I have never tried weed in my life and have little interest in it. However, this documentary really got to me because of the whole governmental conspiracy element, on both Canadian and American fronts. I doubt we will see marijuana legalized or even decriminalized in either Canada or the U.S. in the next decade, ESPECIALLY after seeing this movie!

    Must-see! You will never forget it.
    7icelandicpoet

    america bad

    Clearly, convincingly and engagingly outlines the war on Marijuana and why exactly America sucks. Learnt a lot about how corrupt the American government and pharmaceutical industry is. If you're knowledgeable of the topic, then I don't entirely know if you can get much more out of it then a well packaged rundown of it all.

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    • Citações

      Joe Rogan: It's a weird thing that you do when you make nature against the law.

    • Conexões
      Features A Porta da Loucura (1938)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Willie the Weeper
      By The Grand Dominion Jazz Band

      GHB Records

      www.gdjb.com

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 8 de junho de 2007 (Canadá)
    • País de origem
      • Canadá
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Союз
    • Locações de filme
      • Abbotsford, Columbia Britânica, Canadá
    • Empresa de produção
      • Score G Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • CA$ 200.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 44 min(104 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono

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