Capital in the Twenty-First Century

2019

Action / Documentary

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Michael Douglas Photo
Michael Douglas as Gordon Gekko
Vanessa Redgrave Photo
Vanessa Redgrave as Self - protester
Ronald Reagan Photo
Ronald Reagan as Self
Daniel Huttlestone Photo
Daniel Huttlestone as Gavroche
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
944.26 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S ...
1.9 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S ...
943.42 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.89 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
24 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 0 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by kosmasp8 / 10

All about the Benjamins

Or whoever is on your ... money thing you use. A documentary about capitalism and about how money works. Most seems to be .. well something you should know even without seeing the movie at hand. The documentary also takes examples of how movies portrays money - Gordon Gekko cannot miss this opportunity - Greed is good? Not really, but then again we have different world views, so there is that.

The documentary also raises a few questions, but don't expect this to be the solution or answer ... it just shows you many things. I would think that many will agree that a lot of it does not work for the majority of people ... the rich might beg to differ of course. I have not read the book this is based on, but I think most will prefer a movie anyway to reading ... which of course is not necessarily a good thing.

Reviewed by classicalsteve10 / 10

Uncovers the Current Economic Divide and Its Affect on Middle Class Politics

In Europe and elsewhere among developed nations, there has been a rise of leaders who propagate nationalistic and populist agendas. These leaders often advocate the vilification of ethnic and minority groups as the roots of many national problems. The root of social problems, these leaders often argued, lie with things like non-majority ethnicities, immigrants, and other marginalized minorities. Sound familiar? I am not actually describing the present. I am describing the rise of fascism in industrial nations just after the First World War. What does this have to do with the present documentary about capitalism? Everything.

At its core, "Capital in the Twenty-First Century" concerns how capitalism is currently operating in the industrialized world. Mainly the documentary offers a 100-minute overview of why and how economic forces are working the way they are in the present by using the unfolding of events and policies of the past as a guide. The core thesis is based on a book by Thomas Piketty, a French economist who wrote a book of the same title. In a nutshell, the documentary argues through its commentaries, mainly recognized intellectuals in economic theory, that monetary elites are pushing much of the political establishment to maintain an economic system which benefits the 1% and even the .01% and .001% of income earners. This system of self-regulation by the upper class was essentially how first world nations operated prior to the First World War (1914-1918).

The main thesis of "Capitalism" is that the current economic divides which are now occurring throughout the industrialized world are becoming, or may have already become, mirror images of economic systems of centuries past, such as from circa 1700 to 1915. Prior to the outbreak of the First World War, a wealthy elite class dictated how the economic structure would be run. Laws were passed by "democracies" which tended to benefit those at the top. Politicians back by wealthy elites with campaign contributions would maintain their economic interests. The middle classes would play second-banana to the economic constructs of the upper moneyed class. Sound familiar? It isn't coincidence that the rise of Nazi Germany was a direct outcome of economic hardship in Central Europe, which we'll get to later.

After the two world wars, this sensibility shifted drastically, especially with the worldwide Depression of the 1930's. After WWI and WWII, two things happened in terms of a shift of outlook, especially in Europe but also in the US. Soldiers made up mostly of the middle class basically fought and won the war against the Axis Powers (Germany, etc.). People realized that the middle class should have at least some of the benefits which were reaped previously almost exclusively by the elites. Also, the governments of Europe needed capital to rebuild. The middle class had been largely employed for the conflict, so the only people left to tax was the rich, which allowed a new middle class to develop. (You couldn't tax a middle class family in Germany or France whose house and property had been destroyed as a result of the war!)

This idyllic situation was short-lived, from about 1946 to 1975. Some economic downturns occurred, particularly in the US, in the 1970s. This allowed an opportunity for the monetary elites to regain not only some of the pie they had lost after WWII which was now going largely to the middle class but regain their power over the economic system. A new breed of politician emerged, conservative Republicans in the US and Conservative Party politicians in the UK. (After circa 1980, the so-called conservative southern "Dixiecrats" in the US began to disappear, now favoring the republican party and its agenda.) They claimed the economic problems were due to too much regulation of capital and too much taxes on the wealthy. Later, immigration would be added to the list of contributors to economic problems.) The doc argues that neither of these circumstances actually created the economic woes of the 1970's, which in large part were due to Middle East oil embargoes.

US President Ronald Reagan and UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher proposed a new economic outlook, labeled "tickle-down economics". The theory was by freeing up capital among the elites, such as lowering their taxes and deregulating finance, would allow for more investment. Yes, the elites would have more capital, i.e. more money, but the pie would grow and allow those of the bottom 90% to enjoy a the same economic slice of a supposedly bigger pie. Theoretically, if the pie is bigger, even if the slice is the same percentage, the slice will be bigger also. Hence, the economic benefits would "trickle down".

Everyone agrees that the former occurred: the top 1% and in particular the top 0.1% and .01% saw their pieces of the economic pie rise significantly if not exponentially in a bigger pie. (You can clearly see the staggering economic gains by the wealthiest between 1980 and 1990 when a valuable painting which fetched $1 million in 1980 would go for $25 million in 1990.) What didn't happen was the slices of the middle class didn't increase but at best remained stagnant, and those on the bottom saw their slices shrink. You could argue that the slices of the middle class in a way did shrink because their wages and incomes remained largely unchanged. In other words, they were getting a smaller slice of a bigger pie, not the same slice in a bigger pie. For example, say the pie was four pieces, and the middle class receives one piece, basically 25% of the pie. The pie increases to five pieces by 1990 under Reaganeconomics, but the middle class was still receiving one piece of a five-piece pie, now 20%.

Strangely, what's been happening now, a growing divide between the middle class and upper class, has been fueling the rise of populist and nationalistic leaders. Interestingly, these leaders are eerily similar to figures who rose up 100 years ago. They are against free press, advocate lower taxes, vilify institutions like hospitals and schools. As importantly, they tend to blame easy targets for economic woes: immigrants and minorities. (Donald Trump accused people from south of the US border for "bringing crime and drugs".) The rise of Donald Trump as president of the US is not a phenomenon in a vacuum. This populism, a backlash against the economic divides, has allowed for fascist leaders and ideologies to come to the fore. The vote in favor of Brexit and some eastern European far-right politicians are cases in point. Viktor Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary. has led the country more towards a totalitarian state with less free press and much anti-immigration in a nation where the population is declining.

As one economist explained: the blame against ethnic and other kinds of minorities as the cause of economic difficulties are the wrong targets. Even if governments adopt policies to expel illegals and other immigrants from first world nations, there is little if no evidence to suggest that that in and of itself will create any kind of economic prosperity for citizens. The illegals and minorities are not the problem and expelling them on a mass scale probably won't create a significant number of jobs. Viktor Orbán has put into place all these anti-immigration policies in Hungary and there's almost no evidence these policies have helped Hungary's economic and social problems. Some academics in international economic policy have argued his policies may be hurting his own country in the long term.

The documentary points out that Nazi Germany propagated that Jews and other minorities were responsible for their economic woes of its country in the 1930's. Adolf Hitler expanded the rhetoric to include other European countries. This outlook basically was Germany's justification to invade other European countries who were responsible for their demise. (There was some truth to this because the Treaty of Versailles, which ended WWI, forced Germany to pay huge monetary penalties and compensation which destroyed its economic recovery. Eventually, the policies were largely unenforceable and allowed Germany to augment their military infrastructure. They could have tried to renegotiate the terms of the original treaty but thought it would be much more fun to go to war instead. By 1945, much of Germany was completely destroyed, essentially the result of economic and international policies that imploded on its own country.

Could these economic disparities also lead to a military crisis not unlike WWI and WWII? I think the question is open and much more relevant today than it was even 20 years ago. The solution proposed by the economists is to return to regulating and taxing the elites again as they did from circa 1946 to 1975. Is the political will there to achieve this? It's difficult for politicians to bite the hands that feed them. As long as the elites control the politics, it will be an uphill climb.

Reviewed by paul2001sw-14 / 10

Great book, trite documentary

Thomas Piketty's 'Capital in the 21st Century' is a thorough, thought-provoking book about the nature of our society and economy. This documentary, based on the book, is sadly not very good, a whistle-stop tour of every flaw of capitalism associated with a giddying succession of background images. A succession of talking heads either provide brief insight into topics that would have merited a documentary in themselves, or give us a short summary of common knowledge that shows very little understanding (I do not believe that the person who comments on Adam Smith, for example, has actually read anything by Smith; someone else seems to believe Margaret Thatcher somehow broke new ground as a Prime Minister who wasn't an aristocrat; everything gets boiled down into simplistic factoids that perfectly embody what everybody knows already but which aren't in fact correct). It's a shame; the book has sufficient merit that you even learn a lot from reading critiques of it by those who disagree with it; this film will teach you nothing at all.

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