Bananas!*

2009
7| 1h27m| en| More Info
Released: 09 October 2009 Released
Producted By: Magic Hour Films ApS
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://www.bananasthemovie.com/
Synopsis

Juan “Accidentes” Dominguez is on his biggest case ever. On behalf of twelve Nicaraguan banana workers he is tackling Dole Food in a ground-breaking legal battle for their use of a banned pesticide that was known by the company to cause sterility. Can he beat the giant, or will the corporation get away with it?

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Reviews

Solemplex To me, this movie is perfection.
Mjeteconer Just perfect...
Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
sono-babbo-natale I saw the documentary at a docu-fiction festival that is screened every year in my city and I also watched it with my kids (10+).The documentary is very good in terms of actions, suspense and overall story. It is very enjoyable to watch.It describes the bad practice of banana production in the 70s and possibly later in the great plantations of Dole and the like. Airplanes sprayed chemicals on plantations on plants, fruits, and ... workers. Those are basically drenched by the chemicals. Unsurprisingly they developed all sorts of illnesses.The documentary produced some good evidence (such as letters) that pesticides were actually sprayed on people. Possibly also that this massive use of pesticides continued even after those chemicals were banned in the U.S. and the interviews with the Dole people and the farmers are very good (no matter on whose side you are standing one).The factual accuracy may be a bit shaky and sometimes the romancing of the story gets in the way. For example there is not a recap of the facts by the lawyer, who is the main character of the movies. It is a "to say and not say", "we will discover in the court", etc. Albeit they might have wanted to avoid legal challenges by Dole, they could have been more precise. This is OK for legal thriller, a bit less for the documentary.At the end of the day, the kids liked it, they found it an interesting story and the main message went through.
gavin6942 Juan "Accidentes" Dominguez is on his biggest case ever. On behalf of twelve Nicaraguan banana workers he is tackling Dole Food in a ground-breaking legal battle for their use of a banned pesticide that was known by the company to cause sterility.The film was criticized by Dole for containing "patent falsehoods". Following an attempted lawsuit and attempt to block the film, the lawsuit never went through and the film was shown -- even debuting at the Swedish parliament! Further, an investigation of misconduct against Dominguez found nothing. Vindicated? I think so.While this is not the great documentary about South American workers trying to win judgments from American companies, it is important to see the pattern and the slow, steady rise of social justice. Between this and "The Coca Cola Case", it makes for a good double feature on what can be done.
Tracy Allard As a documentary movie aficionado I see dozens of documentaries a year, about people/social issues, the environment, corporate greed, you name it I'll see it. I usually have an underdog penchant and find such documentaries quite appealing to my sense of fairness and justice. If they are well done in a movie sense, then that is a bonus on top of the message.This film Bananas failed in both regards. From the outset, the sleazy Cuban/American ambulance chasing lawyer is completely untrustworthy looking and suspicious. Shown racing around in his noisy red Lamborghini, contemplating his riches while puffing on a huge cigar, showing off his nice office, doing radio shows were he parades his achievements... Everything about this lawyer is off-putting.Then the material itself, witnesses who purger themselves, no investigation shown, confusing legalese as to whether it's a class action or only for the six first clients, to which were added six other clients??? Very little contact time with main lawyer. To add to the confusion, the time-line is often unclear. That particular pesticide was banned in the late 70s and it appears that the workers were questioned regarding work conditions during that period. I do not recall the film mentioning at which date the pesticide stopped being used. But the film does insinuate that it is no longer in use at present date.Really the only interesting scenes were those where one of Doles VPs concedes to all points raised by the prosecution, but seeming to be very secure regarding the pesticide application methods practiced by the company.Unfortunately, the most truth resonating moment in the film is in the epilogue. Where it is stated that the partial victory was overturned due to perjury by witness and prosecuting team.This topic had great potential to make for an excellent documentary, but it failed miserably on all counts. I suspect the failure is in large part due to the ambulance-chasing lawyer's suspicious behaviour and lack of professionalism. How unfortunate to waste such a great opportunity.
stensson As most people who have seen it or will see it know, Dole put a law-suite on the filmmaker. It started an immense fuzz in Sweden, with boycotts from hamburger and supermarket chains, not to talk about the common consumers. After a while Dole dropped the case. Did they really think they would get anything but bad-will from acting the way they did? And how is the movie? It's effective, merciless and quite exciting. Not at least the scenes from the courtroom. Is it objective? No, according to old documentary traditions, it isn't. It's part of a debate and if you're against that, you really have to explain your views on democracy.And Dole really has to check the competence of those who work in their marketing department.