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IMDbPro

The Take

  • 2004
  • Unrated
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
The Take (2004)
Documentary

In the wake of Argentina's economics collapse of 2001, factory workers break into abandoned factories and restart production. Could these pioneers of cooperative ownership be a model for reb... Read allIn the wake of Argentina's economics collapse of 2001, factory workers break into abandoned factories and restart production. Could these pioneers of cooperative ownership be a model for rebuilding Argentina's economy?In the wake of Argentina's economics collapse of 2001, factory workers break into abandoned factories and restart production. Could these pioneers of cooperative ownership be a model for rebuilding Argentina's economy?

  • Director
    • Avi Lewis
  • Writer
    • Naomi Klein
  • Stars
    • Matilde Adorno
    • Michel Camadessus
    • Bill Clinton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Avi Lewis
    • Writer
      • Naomi Klein
    • Stars
      • Matilde Adorno
      • Michel Camadessus
      • Bill Clinton
    • 16User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Photos4

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    Top cast17

    Edit
    Matilde Adorno
    • Self - Worker
    Michel Camadessus
    • Self
    Bill Clinton
    Bill Clinton
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Gustavo Cordera
    • Self (singer)
    • (as Bersuit)
    Freddy Espinoza
    • Self (president of La Forja)
    Raul Godoy
    • Self
    Néstor Kirchner
    Néstor Kirchner
    • Self
    Naomi Klein
    Naomi Klein
    • Self (also narrator)
    Avi Lewis
    Avi Lewis
    • Self (also narrator)
    Celia Martinez
    • Self
    Carlos Saúl Menem
    Carlos Saúl Menem
    • Self
    • (as Carlos Menem)
    Lalo Paret
    • Self (activist)
    Juan Domingo Perón
    Juan Domingo Perón
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Jorge Rimondi
    • Self (Judge)
    Anoop Singh
    • Self (Director of the IMF's Western Hemisphere Department)
    Luis Zamara
    • Self
    Luis Zanón
    • Self
    • Director
      • Avi Lewis
    • Writer
      • Naomi Klein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.61.2K
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    Featured reviews

    dan_sprocket

    Eye-opening and Hopeful

    This movie helps progressive people address one of the main criticisms of the right and capitalists: what would you do differently if capitalism and globalization is so bad?

    Argentina was a country where public utilities had been sold off and money fled the country. Factories were left empty, owing millions of dollars in taxes to various levels of government. The workers thought: we don't have jobs, so we can't buy things for our families. There are no jobs, because people aren't buying things for their families. So they broke the cycle, and with government approval (eventually) occupied the factories and just started producing items for themselves and their neighbors. The co-operative/collectivist movement in Argentina flourished.

    The movie shows it was far from easy, and there are many hurdles left to overcome for this country and its people. But it's a hopeful message that if you buy locally, use locally produced services and products produced "locally", you create a viable economic cycle that enriches everybody. You may not have $40 microwaves produced someplace else on the other side of the world, but instead you get a quality product produced by your neighbour, that doesn't require the expense and waste of trans-global shipment. Then, the makers of cheap microwaves will be forced to pay their workers more in order to create a local/national market for their products, rather than using slave labour and shipping the products overseas to the "first world".

    Okay, I'm off my soap box. Well done movie with real emotion and appeal.
    pdx3525

    Raises More Questions than it Answers

    The collapse of Argentina's peso in 2001 threw millions out of work and plunged what had been one of Latin America's most prosperous countries in the 1990s into the kind of economic depression not seen in the United States since the 1930s. Four years later thousands of ruined businesses remain closed. In a handful of cases, though, workers occupied and reopened shut factories, health clinics, and schools as employee-owned and operated- cooperatives.

    How Argentine workers did this is a terrific story. Unfortunately, "The Take", a film directed and narrated by anti-globalization activists Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis raises more questions than it answers.

    According to Klein and Lewis, Argentine workers now run more than 200 companies employing 15,000 people. To explain how this happened, the movie documents a campaign by unemployed machinists to put a casting parts plant back in business. Along the way, we see examples of other successful cooperatives, including a shop of seamstresses, a ceramic tile manufacturer, and a tractor factory.

    The new worker owners featured in "The Take" are earnest and enthusiastic. They are especially moving when describing the effects of years of unemployment and how their lives have improved for the better after returning to work. No one, though, tells us basic facts about these companies, such as whether wages and benefits have gone up or down under cooperatives, how the worker-owned companies pay for their raw materials, who buys their products, and if they make a profit. These are not idle points, as any owner – Argentine worker or multinational plutocrat -- knows.

    How does the "The Take" fill up its time? In between interviews with cooperative members about the glories of worker control we get lectures about the lack of differences among candidates in the 2003 Argentine presidential election, the pointlessness of voting, and the failings of the International Monetary Fund. We're also treated to a long slow motion sequence of a street riot in Buenos Aires – complete with Mercedes Sosa soundtrack -- that depicts heroic workers and the equally heroic Klein and Lewis calling each other on their cell phones.

    There's a good documentary to be made about what has happened to Argentina's economy and its workers. Klein and Lewis, however, take the easy way out and give us slogans and mushy analysis that leave the audience skeptical and suspicious.

    4/10
    8leerufong

    a message all of us need to hear..

    namely that there ARE options available to us all.

    8/10 for the message of hope, commiseration for our working/unemployed Argentine brothers and sisters.

    6/10 for the quality of the film.

    there is so much unhappiness among the people of the world that ARE working, let alone those suffering war, poverty/sickness. Billions of workers' tax dollars bailing out banks and corporations, as decisions by the politicians of canada and the u.s.?!? You need to wake up if you do not realize the intent behind such policies. Why do so many people continue to accept idiotic and heartless "bosses" in the workplace? Their positions of power are supported by fear, and violence. We NEED movies like this at the very least to show us all the glimmer of light at the end of OUR long, dark tunnel..

    the direct democracy worked towards by the people filmed here, is the democracy i believe in. for me the most important lesson here is that the workers succeeded with the support of their Community.

    great things are possible when we work together.

    Occupy.Resist.Produce!

    Horizontalidad!!
    9wandereramor

    Good news for once

    For folks of the leftist persuasion there's not really been a lot of cheerful stuff in the news for the past decade or three. The trouble with normal, as they say, is that it always gets worse. Most political documentaries are the same way -- something terrible is happening, the polemical narrator assures us, and other than the go-out-and-do-something last ten minutes of the film things are kind of universally bleak.

    The Take opposes all of that, and is the rare piece of media in which the revolution is not just a vague series of values but an actual practise, made up mostly of hard work and disagreement, but moving forward in a positive direction nonetheless. Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein aren't the slickest filmmakers in the world, but they know enough to get out of the way and let the incredible story before them unfold. One of the few documentaries -- one of the few films period -- that I've left feeling genuine hope, this is a must-see for anyone who believes (or wants to believe) that another world is possible.
    10coweatman

    dump the bosses!

    the worker owned factories in argentina are one of the best developments in recent history. i think the most interesting part of it is that people who are not ostensibly "political" have responded to a crisis by instituting something, spontaneously, that looks like it is within spitting distance of anarchosyndicalism. joe hill would be proud.

    i saw this film as part of the touring show for the lost film festival, and it was easily the highlight of the show. I'm eagerly awaiting this to come to a local theater so i can see it again, and i'm going to try to get as many people as possible to go.

    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 27, 2005 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • Argentina
    • Official sites
      • 2-1-0 Films (Greece)
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Захват
    • Filming locations
      • Buenos Aires, Federal District, Argentina
    • Production companies
      • Barna-Alper Productions
      • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
      • Klein Lewis Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $30,380
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,625
      • Sep 26, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $30,380
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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