Pubdate: Wed, 09 Mar 2005 Source: Link, The (CN QU Edu) Copyright: 2005 The Link Contact: http://thelink.concordia.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2694 Author: Maya Khourchid CRACKDOWN ON COCA WARRANTED? Documentary's elegant rhetoric uncoils plant politics On June 30, 2007, presidential elections will be held in Bolivia. This is not a fact of vital importance to many people, but it is critical to the release and distribution of the new documentary The Real Thing: Coca, Democracy and Rebellion in Bolivia, which premiered at Concordia's DeSeve Theatre last Friday. The Real Thing was filmed, produced and written by a team of three Canadians: Jim Sanders, Andre Clement and Lucien Read. Under their independent production company Dada World Data Production, a crash course on Bolivian coca politics is presented. The film takes the audience on a ride, opening with a cocaine deal in a broken down bathroom. The story unfolds, told through varying mediums: voice-overs, flashback sequences, narration, computer graphics, subtitles and interviews. Authorities on the subject, such as renowned scholar and MIT professor Noam Chomsky, accentuate its credibility. Bolivia is the poorest country in the South America, and its livelihood is largely dependant on coca. Most will recognize that this plant is the main ingredient in cocaine, but it has many other functions besides the use predominantly attributed to it. In fact, in its natural form as a leaf, coca acts as a mild stimulant and appetite suppressant that kept Sanders healthy due to the lack of vegetarian options during his stay in Bolivia. Moreover, derivatives from the plant (though not the drug) give Coca Cola its flavour. The U.S.-directed War on Drugs has led to a crack down on this plant. The American government has been pushing for the eradication of coca and replacement with alternative crops. This, the movie points out, ultimately leads to a dire fate for farmers whose welfare is dependant on its cultivation. The documentary stays away from the subject of cocaine proliferation and trafficking, focusing instead on the political turmoil U.S. foreign policy has inflicted on the country. Alternative crops have failed in Bolivia, where often it is "cheaper to leave them rotting in the fields than take them to market," a farmer in the film reveals. The film asks why the War on Drugs attacks the plant, harmless in its natural form, instead other aspects more closely linked to the cocaine trade. "Corn is a plant, and coca is a plant. Why not attack corn?" a poor farmer asks the camera, iterating the injustice perceived at attacking the crop so aggressively. "Who is to blame, the one who produces it or the one who consumes it?" The ominous situation of a country that has followed International Monetary Fund's "shock therapy" reforms and collaborated willingly in the U.S. War on Drugs is graphically illustrated. Bolivia is poorer and more divided than ever. Social movements against neo-imperialism are on the rise. The current government, following the wishes of the U.S., does not appear to be representative of the will of the people. Just when the point of the film seems clear, that the coca plant and the coca farmers are the wrongful victims in the War on Drugs, the movie takes a sharp turn. The Movemento al Socialismo, the Bolivian socialist party, is introduced. It is rapidly gaining popularity in a country sick of U.S. intervention. Interviews with Evo Morales, the party's candidate up for presidential election in 2007, and Chomsky bring the film full circle. The War on Drugs and the War on Terrorism, they maintain, are both the same. Elegantly designed rhetoric has nothing to do with drugs at all, but to allow the U.S. access to the countries' resources, it keeps the door open to exploitation by foreign multi-national corporations. The film works as a coil in structure, unraveling itself to reach the core and for the most part it was filmed that way. "It was not necessarily a planned film but more of a journey" says Sanders, of his visit to the World Social Forum in Brazil and the backpacking experience that led to the making of the film. Sanders, in a question and answer period that followed the screening, maintains that Morales is a threat to the U.S. due to his anti-intervention platform. Seeing as the party received 22 per cent of the popular votes in the last election, he appears to be a viable candidate for the next presidency. According to Sanders, the film aims to bring the Bolivian situation to public awareness before the next election. "Getting the info out" and keeping it in the public eye could ensure an election free of U.S. intervention. A fair election might see Morales in power and with him a consideration for a population devastated by the War on Drugs. More info on the film can be found at www.dadaworlddata.com. For the complete Cinema Politica schedule, visit www.cinemapolitica.org. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh