Manufactured Landscapes
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Manufactured Landscapes

2006, Environment  -   44 Comments
7.70
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Ratings: 7.70/10 from 23 users.

Manufactured LandscapesManufactured Landscapes is the striking documentary on the world and work of renowned artist Edward Burtynsky.

Internationally acclaimed for his large scale photographs of manufactured landscapes - quarries, recycling yards, factories, mines and dams - Burtynsky creates stunningly beautiful art from civilization's materials and debris.

The film follows him through China, as he shoots the evidence and effects of that country's massive industrial revolution.

With breathtaking sequences, such as the opening tracking shot through an almost endless factory, the filmmakers also extend the narratives of Burtynsky’s photographs, allowing us to meditate on our impact on the planet and witness both the epicenters of industrial endeavor and the dumping grounds of its waste.

In the spirit of such environmentally enlightening sleeper-hit as An Inconvenient Truth, Manufactured Landscapes powerfully shifts our consciousness about the world and the way we live in it, without simplistic judgments or reductive resolutions.

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Richard Neva
Richard Neva
10 years ago

Did not understand a word of it so I left it after 10 minutes!

kmuz38b
kmuz38b
11 years ago

Reminds me of Koyanisqatsi, Baraka, etc. Translation: Love it.

Lovro Šari? Kora?evi?
Lovro Šari? Kora?evi?
11 years ago

Yes, watch it! Great photography, great man and a great team.
It makes you want to boycott "made in China" but than you think of where's your keyboard made :( And even if you at least decide to buy clothes from local tailors their fabrics came from China anyway... Isn't that frustrating!??
But I guess education is a way out too so will share this for sure with my brainwashed passive consumers called friends.

Also; free Ai Wei Wei !!! ;)

Lovro Šari? Kora?evi?
Lovro Šari? Kora?evi?
11 years ago

Yes, watch it! Great photography, great man and a great team.
It makes you want to boycott "made in China" but than you think of where's your keyboard made :( And even if you at least decide to buy clothes from local tailors their fabrics came from China anyway... Isn't that frustrating!??
But I guess education is a way out too so will share this for sure with my brainwashed passive consumers called friends.

Also; free Ai Wei Wei !!!

Sherman Monro
Sherman Monro
11 years ago

Absolutely fabulous photography, video and audio, although at times, music is a little loud and the words are sunk in sound. Also, I wish there was a subtitle for workers words; and the content, quite valid and sad! Thank you, all together, it is a brilliant job. It really provokes a sense of urgency to change our course; otherwise, soon the sudden collapse is inevitable.

It’s such a challenge to change the mentalities of those who have recently joined the party and have experienced the consumerist culture. Even younger generation is longing to earn more and consume more!
After industrial revolution, we started to exploit the resources of this planet and leaping forward rather than walking. In turn, we have been changing the landscape and destroying the environment. It is very sad to me to see how has become of China and even more sad is that the rest of its population still is going to join the party.
The solution is out of reach. Since the only solution is to have all the nations sit at a round table --- not like the one in UN --- and talk about minimizing the exploitation of resources and through innovations which can be materialized by technology and find a way out of this mess. Pulling guns on each other will result in extinction of man on this planet. Those idiots, who think will be safe and survive in the bunkers for years, should think twice.
It seems we are following “the survival of the fittest” theory but that doesn’t work here since even the fittest will eventually go down with these destructive practices.
We have learned from science that destroying our environment equals our destruction, yet, we are doing it not because of need but greed.
We have to sit down and solve this problem with compassion, love and reconnection with our environment, with ourselves. The current way of life has separated us from each other and the nature. We have lost our connections with the Earth!
However, this is a dream to make everyone to be compassionate and have empathy for other fellow man; therefore, we are doomed to perish from the face of this planet --- not next weekend but much sooner than we think!

RussellB
RussellB
12 years ago

Submit to providence willingly, freely. To submit to this is a necessity imposed in nature on all creatures equally.

Robyn318
Robyn318
12 years ago

We can live for each other--here and now, before it's too late, sympathetically sharing snapshots from inside our still-conscious heads, all 6.7 billion heads containing just as many hypothetical universes, most of them, unfortunately, spinning feverishly with the illusions we've just shattered.

lakhotason
lakhotason
12 years ago

Or flip that around. Maybe we are here because the universe first imagined us.

magarac
magarac
12 years ago

When i saw these seemingly endless rows of assembling stations in the beginning i could not help but think about their future.
Once their wages are going to start to raise and will go past the cost of automatisation what will happen to all these people?
Most of the different tasks that could be seen would be very simply done by machines.

zevolev
zevolev
12 years ago

Coming from someone who works manufacturing:
I didn't really want to come home to watch a bunch of people do what I do everyday - but to the ignorant, this happens in the West too (I mean manufacturing+pollution as a result, not necessarily poor working conditions of course... at least they touched on the subject of land depletion here), just a lot less since we have to pay people more to make stuff here. Environments can be as toxic too (where I work 95% of product we deal with has potential to cause DNA damage, cancer, breathing problems, massive fire, explosions, etc. not to mention this stuff couldn't be more dangerous to environment).

Unfortunate that me saying that "I'm going to buy solar panels and a bunch of wind generators for an "electric farm", plant trees, buy a Velomobile, energy efficient tiny house": A lot of byproduct was made to create this stuff in the process to begin with. And a lot, still made in China, no matter how hard we as consumers try to buy local or whatever - it's corporations doing the outsourcing and telling us what we need. It's not easy to boycott products that were made in such conditions when the only stores in town are those of which support it to begin with (and take business away from smaller outlets, thus closing them down). Yeah, I'd certainly pay more for goods and services that don't fall apart after the first or second use, or first wash&dry as it were.

Oh and how silly I have to work in oil or gas related fields so I can retire far, far away from it all... blah, the world is screwed.

You know after watching the "dirty cities" documentary and watching this, I've come to the conclusion that we really haven't solved our problem with rolling in our own sh*t.

Alexander
Alexander
12 years ago

this may seem exotic for some ppl, but after 9 hours every day in similar conditions i really dont want to watch more factories, thumbs down, doc lacks broader perspective

francisco sa
francisco sa
12 years ago

Humans are creating huge environmental challenges for themselves and the Earth, we solve them or otherwise our instintion as species is required for the future of the planet.

MatarD
MatarD
12 years ago

What strikes me is that mass of people/workers accepting the situation. This is a doc centered on China, but there is not much difference elsewhere.

Here we have the reason why we are failing

Oxley
Oxley
12 years ago

The Earth will be fine it has time, it's us Humans that are doomed.

Billyo O'D
Billyo O'D
12 years ago

Oh how we take our planet & resources for granted. When do we stop?

drinker69
drinker69
12 years ago

We need to build more trees. Next.

Robyn318
Robyn318
12 years ago

The narrator says he wants to show who we are in relation to our planet. I see us as just another organism that moves elements (nutrients and minerals) from inside the earth to the outside, where it can be readily accessed by other organisms. The land where I live is solid clay, I have dug down 13 feet in spots and hit nothing else but clay. There is an indigenous plant called ‘pigweed’ that has a long tap root, sometimes 6 or 7 feet long, whose purpose is to bring nutrients from that 6 or 7 foot depth to the surface, in the form of leaves and stems, making those nutrients available to other organisms.

We think that we are ‘special’ in some divine or evolutionary way; but the truth is we are just another ‘bug’ on the planet, whose purpose is to recycle the resources, turn the soil, amass large quantities of minerals and ‘building’ elements from one area to another like the dinosaur era did with coal and oil, to be used by the next generation of occupants.

We are a petri dish of bacteria left to our own devices, that in the beginning thrive on the resources, then as its waste overpowers the environment, becomes sickly and eventually dies off. This video is an eloquent representation of the same process that bacteria go through; only we can see it at eye level.

As I watched this video I couldn’t help but see mankind as a ‘super-organism’ whose purpose is to take raw materials, refine or combine them and convert them into more complex products, no different in fact than the plants, coral, parrot fish and volcanoes have done for millions of years.

Mercenarry ForHire
Mercenarry ForHire
12 years ago

Nothing Lasts forever.

Matt Kukowski
Matt Kukowski
12 years ago

Hard to say if this is Progress or not. Either way the Sun will still rise and set with the Eons to come. I worry about the water and the air pollution heavily. Beautiful photography.

Watching how our human minds love to take nature and arrange it into strait lines and boxes if fascinating at the same time troubling.

Anyone with a spirit knows what I am talking about.

I think eventually Humans need to strike a balance between Nature (trees, mosses, rivers and all that wiggles with Buildings, streets, cars and all that are strait lines)... if we turn the world into strait lines it is game over for life.

dewflirt
dewflirt
12 years ago

All the boring aspects of factory work, uniforms, same task day in day out, rhythms of the machinery and the blank faces. Somehow they become quite soothing when you see other people doing it, like rain hitting windows. There is a disused quarry in my home town that flooded and is now a nature reserve. You only see about a 3rd of it, the rest of it and the equipment is hidden below 250feet of water. I wonder what the mines will be like when they're done with, when nature start sneaking back in. Some of them were almost beautiful. Hadn't realized just how much work was still done by hand, I guess I assumed that most of it would be automated now. Humans must be cheaper.