Creating Freedom: The Lottery of Birth

June. 21,2013      
Rating:
7.9
Trailer Synopsis Cast

THE LOTTERY OF BIRTH is the first in a three-part documentary series entitled 'Creating Freedom' exploring the relationship between freedom, power and control in Western democracies. The series draws together interviews with some of the world's leading intellectuals, journalists and activists to offer an alternative perspective on today's society and the future we're creating. We do not choose to exist, or the environment we grow up in. Our starting point in life is one of passive reliance on forces over which we have no control. THE LOTTERY OF BIRTH shows that from birth onwards our minds are a battleground of competing forces: familial, educational, cultural, and professional. The outcome of this battle not only determines who we become, but the society that we create.

Howard Zinn as  
Vandana Shiva as  
Steven Pinker as  

Reviews

Kailansorac
2013/06/21

Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.

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KnotStronger
2013/06/22

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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InformationRap
2013/06/23

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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Verity Robins
2013/06/24

Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.

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marycullison
2013/06/25

Two hours of my life I can never get back. Almost feel bad for these self-important people who are trying to justify their own success. Would almost be funny if I wasn't fully aware that many will buy into the crap in this movie. Trying to make people who have less or have nothing feel that it is okay, it wasn't their fault. They had no control over the outcome of life. These are obviously people with out faith in a creator and are to self absorbed to even consider that there is a God. While there are a few moments of truth in the movie ( the fact that we often create the "stories" of our history to portray what we want) those moments are few and far between. Don't waste your time.

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Marienna Pope-Weidemann
2013/06/26

If art and activism are to be judged by their potential to trigger transformation, then the Lottery of Birth is a masterpiece on both counts. Visually stunning, strikingly original and quite breath taking in scope, the first installment of the independently-produced Creating Freedom series takes on some of the most pressing and fundamental questions facing progressive struggles today. While following its own carefully crafted line of argument, the film draws together a remarkable collection of interviews from progressive academics across the world in both the social and natural sciences. Many are beloved and familiar faces on the left: Tony Benn, Vandana Shiva, Michael Albert and the late, great Howard Zinn. (Rumour has it, Chomsky's in the sequel.) The interviewees are intimately lit against cold black backdrops and skillful direction has them leaning into the lens like you're the only person in the room.Beautifully scripted throughout, the film ruthlessly unpicks many of the founding myths of liberal democratic theory, scrutinising what it means to live in a system that tells people they are free, whilst embedding them from birth in vast systems of socialisation and control: at home, at school, at church and at work. Prepare to be reminded of it every time you mount an empty escalator or watch the sun set over a city skyline: it throws out clusters of deeply evocative and analogous images that will follow you round for months after you see the film, and betray the creator's background in fine arts.Taking human freedom as its core value, it shows viewers the extent to which megalithic economic, educational and political institutions cripple our liberty and cultivates a divisive culture of competitive individualism. Apparently it has been widely well-received, topping the download charts in South and North America – a remarkable achievement for such a challenging and subversive film. This success is due at least in part to the language used: universally accessible and devoid of the political-philosophical clichés that so quickly put up barriers to debate, the narrative looks down on no one. This makes for a documentary anyone willing to question themselves can engage with, whatever their beliefs. It is at once uncompromising and deeply compassionate: "History suggests that there is neither a belief too bizarre nor an action too appalling for humans to embrace given the necessary cultural influences… In an important sense, we are not born free. In fact to take our freedom for granted is to extinguish the possibility of attaining it."

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bschafer710
2013/06/27

Just when I think the right wing has a corner on the market on silliness, I run across a movie like this that reminds me that silliness knows no political affiliation. This is truly one of the funniest (unintentionally) movies I have watched in some time. I am proud I had the stomach to see it through. Howard Zinn asserting that he is proudly biased, then claiming objectivity. Assertions that Britain has participated in the deaths of 10 million people and that it is in the same league as Stalin, but we just don't recognized it because we are blinded by patriotism. These academics and journalists are a testament to the tolerance of western democracies, God bless them (as they say in the southern US). Please watch this and be reassured that we are all crazy.

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nevproth
2013/06/28

Made me think and use my brain for a second. What I got out of this is that I need to Question more. Why? I think we question a lot of things as a child, and then we just STOP questioning. I don't know why that happens? We need to still question. Just because we are taught something doesn't mean it is right. I will question myself and others more often. I will be more patient answering my children's questions, but encourage them to seek out their own answers. I want to explore so much more. I guess I can say I'm blessed with being a female and being raised in the United States of America. I've been trained to think that way. I don't think the documentary will save the world or the human race, but it will make people think. Sometimes that is a step in the right direction.

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