Manufactured Landscapes



MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES:

BY JENNIFER BAICHWAL

Manufactured Landscapes is a feature length documentary on the world and work of renowned artist Edward Burtynsky. Burtynsky makes large-scale photographs of 'manufactured landscapes' – quarries, recycling yards, factories, mines, dams. He photographs civilization's materials and debris, but in a way people describe as "stunning" or "beautiful," and so raises all kinds of questions about ethics and aesthetics without trying to easily answer them.

The film follows Burtynsky to China as he travels the country photographing the evidence and effects of that country's massive industrial revolution. Sites such as the Three Gorges Dam, which is bigger by 50% than any other dam in the world and displaced over a million people, factory floors over a kilometre long, and the breathtaking scale of Shanghai's urban renewal are subjects for his lens and our motion picture camera.

Shot in Super-16mm film, Manufactured Landscapes extends the narrative streams of Burtynsky's photographs, allowing us to meditate on our profound impact on the planet and witness both the epicentres of industrial endeavour and the dumping grounds of its waste. What makes the photographs so powerful is his refusal in them to be didactic. We are all implicated here, they tell us: there are no easy answers. The film continues this approach of presenting complexity, without trying to reach simplistic judgements or reductive resolutions. In the process, it tries to shift our consciousness about the world and the way we live in it.

Feature Documentary
2006
Canada
90 minutes

AWARDS AND NOMINATIONS

Winner: Best Documentary - Ecocinema International Film Festival 2008

2007 Genie Award for BEST DOCUMENTARY

Winner: REEL CURRENT AWARD at the Nashville Film Festival (NaFF)

Winner: Genie for Best Feature Documentary 2007

Toronto International Film Festival - One of the Top Ten Films of 2006

Winner: TIFF Toronto-City Award for Best Canadian Feature Film 2006

Winner: Best Canadian Documentary, Atlantic Film Festival 2006

Winner: Best Canadian Documentary, Calgary Film Festival 2006

Winner: Best Feature documentary & Best Canadian Film, Toronto Film Critics Association 2006

Official Selection Sundance Film Festival

Nominated in the best documentary competition at 2008 film independent spirit awards.

REVIEWS AND OTHER MEDIA:

Montreal Gazette, December 14th, 2006:
Award-winning filmmaker Jennifer Baichwal stands out on horizon after turning her camera on photographer's scenes.
Review by John Griffin

Victoria Times Colonist, November 19th, 2006: 
Glorious wastelands.
Review by Michael D. Reid

Ottawaxpress, November 16th, 2006: 
Beautiful devastation.
Review by Matt Harrison

Vancouver Sun, October. 10, 2006: 
Landscapes that weep toxic tears.
Review by Katherine Monk

National Post, Sep. 29, 2006: 
Photos worth a thousand frames.
Review by Chris Knight

★★★★★ (out of 5)
— Eye Magazine
An extraordinarily haunting, beautiful, insightful, touching and thought-provoking movie.
— Al Gore

Visit Mercury Films for more information.