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Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price (2005)

Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price (2005)
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Wal-Mart has become one of America's most successful retail chains by offering everyday goods at low prices for working families. But just how is Wal-Mart able to charge less than many of their rivals, and what has their success done for their employees? Documentary filmmaker Robert Greenwald takes a look inside the discount retailer's empire in Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price, and discovers a company short on scruples and long on shabby treatment of the people who work for them. Through interviews with labor experts and former Wal-Mart employees, Greenwald documents the firm's anti-union tactics, their history of paying wages often below the poverty line, the high price they charge for health benefits (employees are often encouraged to apply for government subsidized health care programs instead), their methods for driving away locally owned businesses, their practice of hiring illegal aliens for cleanup crews at a fraction of minimum wage, the abysmal working conditions and pay in the Third World plants where much of Wal-Mart's goods are manufactured, and more. Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price is one in a series of muckraking documentaries from director Greenwald which includes the films Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, Uncovered: The War in Iraq, and Unconstitutional: The War on Our Civil Liberties. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Director(s):
Robert Greenwald
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price

Wal-Mart has become one of America's most successful retail chains by offering everyday goods at low prices for working families. But just how is Wal-Mart able to charge less than many of their rivals, and what has their success done for their employees? Documentary filmmaker Robert Greenwald takes a look inside the discount retailer's empire in Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price, and discovers a company short on scruples and long on shabby treatment of the people who work for them. Through interviews with labor experts and former Wal-Mart employees, Greenwald documents the firm's anti-union tactics, their history of paying wages often below the poverty line, the high price they charge for health benefits (employees are often encouraged to apply for government subsidized health care programs instead), their methods for driving away locally owned businesses, their practice of hiring illegal aliens for cleanup crews at a fraction of minimum wage, the abysmal working conditions and pay in the Third World plants where much of Wal-Mart's goods are manufactured, and more. Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price is one in a series of muckraking documentaries from director Greenwald which includes the films Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, Uncovered: The War in Iraq, and Unconstitutional: The War on Our Civil Liberties. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
162 mins
Director(s):
Robert Greenwald
Producer(s):
Robert GreenwaldJim GilliamDevin Smith
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Categories:
DocumentarySpecial Interest
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    Member Reviews
     
    Eva W.

    I will never shop at Wal*Mart again! The movie points out that we pay millions more dollars by paying for Wal*Mart employee's medicare and food stamps then we save a buck or two on our household items. Wal*Mart is truly a monopoly. I do not agree with the other reviews. I found this film to be very informative and definitely worth my time.

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    Gregory B.

    Wal-Mart has two faces. The first face is the one that it presents to the public, and to new employees, explaining how Wal-Mart is the Mecca of fairness, honest labor practices, and the yellow brick road leading to Oz. That face is a humongous lie. This movie shows Wal-Mart's other face (the face that is losing huge lawsuits all across the U.S.). That face is of greed, hatred for American values, and contempt for their employees... That is the real Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart has a detailed structure of rules that their employees can be fired for violating (the purpose actually is mearly so lawyers can smuggly point to the rules if they have to go to court). In actuality obeying all of the rules, and completing your required work, are not compatible. Look around your local Wal-Mart, you will find that the typical employee is elderly, minority or female (or some combination). Many of them are desperate to have a job... and Wal-Mart will do it's very best to keep them desperate.

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    Christopher C.

    I had and still am fighting walmart after a injury I sustained in 2009. I settled in 2011 and I am now getting the treatment I should have got in 2009. I worked for walmart 7yrs giving all and getting nil. Walmart is truly about money and thats it. Mother nature, mankind, and all in between are in its way. This movie show there true colors and is so accurate. Stop feeding the corruption and stop shopping there!

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