Marx Reloaded (TV Movie 2011) Poster

(2011 TV Movie)

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7/10
Dense
mikerodeo201119 April 2011
After 30 minutes I thought about switching this off. In the end it was worth sticking with it. This is not a cinema movie, instead it's a reportage made for television. It's supposed to be "relevant". I struggled through the German dubbing (I fail to see why they couldn't have used subtitles) and at one point felt the film really lacked variety. The pace was unending, one idea rolled out and then another without enough time for reflection. The director had some good ideas, like the pastiche of Alice in Wonderland, and the color-coded visuals helped hold the narrative together. And thinking about it now, the way the narrative progressed helped me understand how the different parts of Marx's work fit together as a whole. Overall it's difficult to judge this as a film with any real defining style. It's probably more important as an idea to provoke debate about the capitalist world we live in.
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10/10
Perfect 10
franmallarcky12 April 2011
The first thing to say is that the version of the film that I saw was dubbed into German, which is not a good idea I think, especially in a documentary like this one where there are no actors (apart from in the cartoon sequences, of course!) and it's arguably better to hear what the people are saying in their own words. But then this is the only negative thing I have to say. Even the bizarre spectacle of watching Slavoj Zizek voiced by a German actor couldn't distract me from the energy and imagination of the direction. I think I'm right in saying that this is Jason Barker's first film, but it feels like a really accomplished work from a more experienced film-maker. He leads us through difficult concepts from Marx's philosophy without patronizing us, as a journalist might, but also without overdoing the philosophy and making things more complicated than they need to be. There are also a lot of comic moments, involving a great encounter between between Marx and Zizek that had me laughing out loud. Can't rate this film highly enough. Bravo.
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10/10
Bold and Intelligent
rolfnlindy16 April 2011
I have seen other films, like Examined Life, which also stars Slavoj Zizek, and which claim to be about philosophy, but which are not remotely philosophical, thought-provoking or even very coherent. But this film's narrative was very intricate, and the film was superbly directed by someone who not only understands philosophy (Jason Barker is an established "theorist" and philosophy translator) but knows how to communicate with an audience. I'm not sure if I understood all the many ideas that were packed in to the relatively short 50 minutes. But it certainly made me want to read more Marx. And the thinkers on offer here all had something different to say. This surprised me, since the impression we get of Marxists is of a bunch of people dogmatically agreeing with each other. But in this film it seems like Marx can't solve the world's problems because no one can really agree what his ideas are. A very intelligent and informative film.
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10/10
Cult Classic
rumblechris1 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I'd never even heard of this film until a couple of weeks ago. I'm a recent convert to the Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek. He writes about popular culture but does it in a really surprising and non-intuitive way. He's also a fairly compulsive writer about Marxism. Unlike in the other films he's made (which gradually I'm staring to watch) in this he's one voice among several other philosophers and critics. What I found fascinating and really energizing is the way you get a sense of a Big Question playing out in real time. The film is talking about the subprime mortgage crisis of 2008 but it's still a film that talks to the here and now: from national debt crises to ecological crisis, it's all brilliantly pieced together like a global jigsaw. Zizek argues that communism today is actually a question of salvaging "the commons" by which he means the "commonwealth" or the combined value of the natural world and its resources. We all breathe the same air and drink the same water. It sounds simple but when you start to unravel the threads it goes to the heart of the way the global economy is run and the profit motive driving it. Doing some research on the other philosophers involved it seems this is a forgotten classic of a film. I can't find anything to compare it with. I recommend it to anyone studying politics or economics.
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