World of Plenty
World of Plenty is a 1943 British documentary film directed by Paul Rotha for the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. It discusses problems with, and possible improvements to, global food distribution.[1]
World of Plenty | |
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Directed by | Paul Rotha |
Produced by | Yvonne Fletcher |
Written by |
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Music by | William Alwyn |
Cinematography | Wolfgang Suschitzky |
Production company | Paul Rotha Productions |
Running time | 43 mins |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Synopsis
An opening narration explaining that the film's purpose is to examine the "world strategy of food", in terms of its production, distribution and consumption. The film is then divided into three parts: "Food - As It Was", "Food - As It Is" and "Food - As It Might Be".
gollark: Giving one company access to people's accurate location history, conversations, emails and whatnot could probably lead to problems.
gollark: Presumably, somewhat creepy overtargeted advertising, spread it further (which I don't really like in itself), probably (if I was weird and still used Google stuff on my phone) listen into my conversations.
gollark: Thing is, what I'm attempting to say is: what sort of bad things do you think people or companies could do with leaked or bought or whatever data?
gollark: Google does, if not much else, have, as far as I know, a good track record for not letting other people get their precious datas.
gollark: I was asking Solar, but yes, that's actually sensible I guess.
References
- "World of Plenty (1943)". Screenonline. British Film Institute. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
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