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.
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