http://www.chireader.com/movies/archives/2004/0704/072304.html

Unsafe at Any Size

The Corporation
Directed by
Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott

Written by
Joel Bakan, Harold Crooks, and Achbar

Narrated by
Mikela J. Mikael.

Rating
* * * *
Masterpiece

By Jonathan Rosenbaum

A month ago I attended back-to-back press screenings of two major
documentaries, Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 and The Corporation,
which finally opened here last week. Though it would have broken with
industry protocol to have said so at the time, before both movies had
opened, it was clear that The Corporation -- a 2003 Canadian film by
Mark Achbar, Jennifer Abbott, and Joel Bakan -- was a better film, and
second looks at both movies has only confirmed this impression. Michael
Moore's movie probably startles people who rely mostly on TV for their
news, but The Corporation will shock even those who keep close track of
newspapers and magazines. In fact, it goes beyond shocking in obliging
us to ask ourselves how far we're all prepared to go in our defense of
capitalism.

Far enough to jeopardize our health and the survival of the planet?
Maybe not, but at the moment it's corporations that appear to have the
power to decide. And the stories this film uses to demonstrate that are
chilling. I'm reminded of Vladimir Nabokov's description of the spark
that led to Lolita: "As far as I can recall, the initial shiver of
inspiration was somehow prompted by a newspaper story about an ape in
the Jardin des Plantes who, after months of coaxing by a scientist,
produced the first drawing ever charcoaled by an animal: the sketch
showed the bars of the poor creature's cage."

This riveting cinematic essay includes no less than 40 talking heads,
ranging from writers such as Noam Chomsky, Milton Friedman, Naomi Klein,
Michael Moore, and Howard Zinn to CEOs such as Ray Anderson (of
Interface, the world's largest commercial carpet manufacturer), Sam
Gibara (Goodyear Tire), Robert Keyes (Canadian Council for International
Business), Chris Komisarjevsky (Burson-Marsteller Worldwide), and Sir
Mark Moody-Stuart (Royal Dutch/Shell). The wide variety of voices --
roughly a quarter of which belong to women -- and the cogent narration,
written by Harold Crooks and Achbar, make for a highly entertaining and
instructive look at a subject that's rarely discussed in detail.

Michael Moore's presence in both films suggests that they should be
regarded as complementary. The Corporation is more intellectual and
nuanced, Fahrenheit 9/11 more emotional and direct. The Corporation is
more interested in concepts, Fahrenheit 9/11 in personalities. Both are
unambiguously leftist and activist. The Corporation is much harder to
describe, which may be why it isn't receiving the media attention
lavished on Fahrenheit 9/11. Yet what it has to say about the future of
the planet and the way we live is even more compelling.

I can't think of another documentary that's taught me as much as this
one. I hadn't known, for example, that the song "Happy Birthday" is
owned by Time Warner (which expects to be paid every time it's sung in a
movie), that for a spell Bechtel controlled the use of water in
Bolivia's third-largest city (the contract even prohibited collecting
rainwater), that one can legally patent "anything that's alive except
for a human being" (including genes and microbes), that Fanta Orange was
created because Coca-Cola wanted to do business in Nazi Germany (where
IBM punch cards were used to collate information on concentration-camp
prisoners), or that, according to a recent U.S. Treasury report, in one
week alone 57 American corporations were fined for trading with official
enemies of the U.S., including terrorists.

This 145-minute movie may not send us out of the theater with the kind
of simple directive Fahrenheit 9/11 did in implicitly urging us to vote
a president out of office, but it doesn't encourage us to accept our
situation either. It also shows us how activism has already made a
difference -- how massive street demonstrations in Bolivia eventually
gave Bolivians free access to water again and how residents in Arcata,
California, managed to block more chain restaurants from moving in.

The Corporation refuses to limit its argument to sound-bite problems
with sound-bite solutions. It starts out with a hilarious critique of
the use of one sound-bite term, "bad apple," when discussing corporate
malfeasance. (The same criticism could be made of its use in discussions
of torture at Abu Ghraib.) We see a dozen routine, glib examples of its
use before the narrator asks, "What's wrong with this picture? Can't we
pick a better metaphor?" After summoning up a host of alternatives --
including "jigsaw," "sports team," "family unit," "telephone system,"
"eagle," "big fish," and "Frankenstein monster" -- the film plunges into
a fascinating account of how corporations as we know them today were
developed by lawyers from the mid-19th through the early 20th centuries.
It ties corporate growth to the Industrial Revolution and the Civil War
-- and to the 14th Amendment, which was intended to protect the rights
of former slaves but later was used to define corporations as if they
were persons. We're told that of the 307 14th Amendment cases brought
before the Supreme Court between 1890 and 1910, 19 were brought by
African-Americans, 288 by corporations.

If, legally speaking, corporations are like people -- enjoying many of
the same freedoms, though saddled with few of the same responsibilities
-- what kind of people are they? Analyzing corporations the way
psychiatrists analyze patients and offering a "personality diagnostic
checklist" of diverse "psychic disorders," The Corporation maintains
that the behavior of corporations is often psychotic -- a premise that's
less fanciful than it sounds if we bear in mind that sanity is more a
social and legal concept than a medical one. Arguing this position seems
like a lawyer's tactic, so it's no surprise that Bakan, the main
scriptwriter, is a lawyer.

Like Fahrenheit 9/11, The Corporation is a critique of the mass media,
but it's also smart enough to know that it's part of the same corporate
world it's exposing. This leads to an especially funny and clever
interlude about what it calls "real-life product placement," in which it
uses itself as a prime illustration, and to a pithy explanation from
Moore of why some corporations are willing to sponsor his anticorporate
shenanigans. We also get a detailed account of how Fox News
systematically suppressed two reporters' evidence of health hazards in
milk containing bovine growth hormone -- a hormone banned in Canada and
Europe but left on the market here because it generates such big profits.

This is a heavy documentary, yet one with a remarkably light touch when
articulating even its scariest points. Any movie that can use portions
of a campy instructional film from half a century ago to further as well
as mock some of its own positions clearly has an advanced sense of
rhetoric, not to mention an imaginative grasp of filmmaking
possibilities. Above all, this movie's flair in using anything and
everything to build its argument with seamless continuity makes it easy
to watch.

Corporate psychoses that lead to corporate offenses are the main bill of
fare here, yet the interviewee who registers as most heroic and
charismatic isn't Chomsky (even if he's less hyperbolic than usual) or
Moore (even though he delivers the film's eloquent last words). It's Ray
Anderson, whose account of how he came to understand environmental
concerns and made sustainability the watchword at his carpet company is
probably the most meaningful personal story this film has to tell. More
broadly, the decision not to divide the world neatly between heroes and
villains, as Fahrenheit 9/11 does, encourages us to see the solutions to
problems as complex rather than as a simple matter of picking the right
political party.


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