Add Film | Edit Film
Search for:  

Film Reviews 
 
Be the first to review:
Life and Debt

Sorry. No reviews are yet available.

To be the first to submit a review use the link displayed above.


Description:
Life and Debt
click to zoom

Set to a beguiling reggae beat, Life and Debt takes as its subject Jamaica's economic decline in the 20th century. The story has reverberations in the plight of other third-world nations blindsided by globalization, like Ghana and Haiti. After England granted Jamaica independence in 1962, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) stepped in with a series of loans. These loans came with strings attached--the kind that would eventually plunge the country $7 billion into debt, stranded without the resources to dig themselves out. Although IMF officials get the chance to have their say, it's clear where filmmaker Stephanie Black's sympathies lie--with the country's underemployed farmers and sweatshop workers. Jamaica Kinkaid (A Small Place) penned the narration, while the soundtrack features some of the "imports" with which this island nation remains mostly closely associated: Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Mutabaruka, who performs the title track. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Release Date: 2001

Director: Black, Stephanie

Buy this film at Amazon.com

Submit a Review  |  79 Hits  |  Visit Website
Last Update: November 22, 2006
  Tell a friend      Get review alerts
Powered by Red Queen v1.05 for documentaryfilms.net