Generation Wealth

Generation Wealth is a 2018 documentary film directed by Lauren Greenfield. It follows Greenfield's 2017 book and photo exhibition of the same name.[1]

Generation Wealth
Directed byLauren Greenfield
Produced by
Written byLauren Greenfield
Starring
Music byJeff Beal
Cinematography
  • Robert Chappell
  • Lauren Greenfield
  • Shana Hagan
  • Jerry Risius
  • Lars Skree
Edited by
  • Victor Livingston
  • Dan Marks
  • Aaron Wickenden
  • Michelle Witten
Production
company
Evergreen Pictures
Distributed by
Release date
Running time
106 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Release

Generation Wealth was selected to be the opening night film at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival in the Documentary Premiere program.[2][3] The film received its European premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival (aka Berlinale 68), where it was featured in the Panorama program.[4] Other festivals include SXSW[5] and CPH:DOX.[6] The film was distributed by Amazon Studios and released in theaters on July 20, 2018.[7][8]

Reception

Nick Allen of RogerEbert.com wrote that the film was "a stunningly deeply resonant documentary about notions as seemingly obvious as the value of love over wealth itself."[9] Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times wrote, "Darting from micro to macro and back again, squashing obscene consumption against child beauty pageants and ruinous debt, its structure makes for an unfocused thesis," adding that "the through line... works."[1] Joseph Walsh of Time Out gave it four out of five stars, writing that the film "lays bare society’s obsession with affluence and excess with scalpel-sharp insight" and "makes for bleak and compelling viewing."[10]

The film was nominated for Best Documentary Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America.[11]

gollark: Anomalies? Abstract concepts? Aardvarks?
gollark: Exciting! What do you have to sell? Smaller obelisks? Monoliths? Pocket universes? Hypercomputers?
gollark: There will be MORE auctioforms?
gollark: Brute force?
gollark: Also, you did make sure to set the cookie to have an unreasonably long expiry time, not just leave it as a session one?

References

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