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Patricia Arquette and Kamala Lopez in Equal Means Equal (2016)

User reviews

Equal Means Equal

6 reviews
10/10

In depth, thorough, and hard hitting documentary on the state of discrimination against women and girls

Equal Means Equal has been described as an unflinching look at the current state of gender inequity, and it truly is unflinching. It's powerful and emotionally raw, exposing the nefarious webs of discrimination against women in an extremely well organized and pointed manner. The most poignant and hard hitting interview of the film is one of a young rape victim describing how she had to walk down her street, bloody, while people stared and no one asked her if she needed help or if she was okay. Gender based discrimination and violence are so everyday and expected, we almost expect this type of treatment for victims and survivors. This should be required viewing for students and legislators.
  • catbetts
  • Sep 5, 2016
  • Permalink
4/10

Poorly made documentary

The essence of a Universe is hard to understand if your telescope only looks at one star in the sky.

Kamala Lopez tries very hard to make us understand an interesting topic from many vantage-points, but fails in delivering a broad and balanced documentary for which this topic clearly needs and deserves. The main problem is it begins with an assumption that; equality does not exist. The documentary then takes us on a tour-de-force of heart-string-pulling, instead of focusing on global issues affecting the entirety of human equality in all countries.

Instead of anecdotal individual stories of how people feel about something which happened only to them, we seek actual documented facts and statistics in totality across the globe. What is also skewed, is that instead of getting both sides, Kamala Lopez decides to focus only in something which supports the premise for which it then propagates.

As such, large portions of this documentary could have been cut and replaced with the larger global picture of equality - which is significantly more important and worthy of our attention.

I hope if Kamala Lopez attempts to look at the topic again, she will buy a bigger telescope and then, we will see something worthy of our attention.
  • mitchmitchell
  • Jan 20, 2017
  • Permalink
9/10

An excellent documentary on the status of women in 2016.

Kamala Lopez and crew do a wonderful job on this 90 minute documentary illustrating the status of women (pay inequity, sexual harassment and domestic violence in the workplace and at home, poverty, the sex trade, and the erosion of reproductive rights to expose a system that repeatedly fails women. Over 80 people are interviewed in this award-winning documentary (2016 Traverse City Film Festival) being released September 6th, 2016.

It is fast paced and the graphics are excellent - particularly those depicting the wage disparity based on race that women in the workplace experience. Other statistics are dis-aggregated as well showing disparities based on race. A much needed addition to the arsenal we can use to succeed in adding women to the U.S. Constitution in the form of the Equal Rights Amendment, a process begun in the early 1900's and still not brought to fruition.
  • equitysue
  • Sep 4, 2016
  • Permalink
1/10

Unwatchable

Dreadful, as is everything Lopez has directed.

Good documentary requires unbiased, curious investigation. This film is an exercise in confirmation bias, at best and is an hysterical rant at worst. Not worth the price of admission even at the free screening I attended. After the showing rather than discussing the film's subject, the audience spent 45 minutes groaning over the poor craft and the blatant narcissism of the filmmaker.

It's a shame that such important material wasn't treated by someone more interested in exposing the truth than making herself the story.

Disappointing and obviously not recommended.
  • jeanmariebishop
  • Nov 27, 2022
  • Permalink
10/10

An intense documentary that makes a nonpartisan argument for passage of the ERA

I had the opportunity to see Equal Means Equal while I was visiting NYC this past weekend. This film raises critical questions about the status of women in our society. A compelling argument is presented to highlight why it is necessary for women and men alike to challenge the absence of female protection and recognition under the US Constitution. By addressing multiple facets of our daily lives, Kamala Lopez draws the viewer into the manner in which all things are connected. Until one area is improved, the others will remain adversely affected. Until we shed what has been the tradition of our nation and redefine our culture, we will continue to see gaps in equity. A historical review shows what few knew and understood, namely the Equal Rights Amendment was a nonpartisan issue. As audience members view this documentary, I hope they can shed their partisan lens and instead view it through a human lens. Is it really too much to ask that Equal Means Equal?
  • AMACsMom
  • Sep 4, 2016
  • Permalink
10/10

Very important film for American women and men to see!

It's hard to believe that Americans don't have equal rights in our Constitution as citizens do across other democracies. Be inspired with this documentary by the words of many equal rights champions now and since passage of the Equal Rights Amendment by Congress in 1972. Also see the ways women's lack of equal rights negatively affects U.S. women and girls (and therefore men and boys, too, as spouses, children, colleagues, etc.), our culture, and our business and government actions. Then join in our centuries-long movement for simple equality of rights for all citizens with discrimination on account of sex no longer constitutional for all rights, not just the right to vote (suffrage).
  • JanetteNoelle
  • Apr 28, 2019
  • Permalink

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