• 171.394 movies
  • 11.359 shows
  • 32.312 seasons
  • 633.692 actors
  • 9.218.719 votes
Avatar
 
banner banner

The Salt of the Earth (2014)

Documentary | 110 minutes
3,70 166 votes

Genre: Documentary / Biography

Duration: 110 minuten

Alternative title: Le Sel de la Terre

Country: France / Brazil / Italy

Directed by: Juliano Ribeiro Salgado and Wim Wenders

Stars: Sebastião Salgado, Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado

IMDb score: 8,4 (24.405)

Releasedate: 29 August 2014

The Salt of the Earth plot

"A Journey With Sebastião Salgado"

For the last 40 years, photographer Sebastião Salgado has traveled on all continents. He has witnessed some of the most important events of our recent history. Such as international conflicts, hunger and exodus. This is a portrait of the Brazilian photographer, who spent eight years capturing uncivilized worlds for his project 'Genesis'.

logo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimagelogo tmdbimage

Reviews & comments


Guest

  • messages
  • votes

Let op: In verband met copyright is het op MovieMeter.nl niet toegestaan om de inhoud van externe websites over te nemen, ook niet met bronvermelding. Je mag natuurlijk wel een link naar een externe pagina plaatsen, samen met je eigen beschrijving of eventueel de eerste alinea van de tekst. Je krijgt deze waarschuwing omdat het er op lijkt dat je een lange tekst hebt geplakt in je bericht.

* denotes required fields.

Pay attention! You cannot change your username afterwards.

* denotes required fields.
avatar van eRCee

eRCee

  • 13408 messages
  • 1953 votes

I initially wondered why the movie has a 16+ rating, but that soon became painfully clear. Some images are not inferior to those from the Nazi death camps. In that respect, the reforestation in northeastern Brazil was a welcome change. In any case, a very special life of this man, Salgado, and of course his wife (as Wenders does not fail to make clear time and time again).

As for the lack of criticism: I see this film as a summary of Salgado's oeuvre, of all his photo series. Because the medium of film simply attracts a different audience than the people who buy photo books. This film is neither journalism nor a biopic. Salgado's personal life only came to the fore insofar as it was relevant to understand the photo projects, but fortunately certainly no more. Imagine if it had always been about that son with Down, then you might as well sit and watch RTL.

Recommended.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van yoda1992

yoda1992

  • 62 messages
  • 1785 votes

Very nice images. However, I missed context about the origin of the photos. How is Salgado financed? How free is he in his choices? Why can he decide to travel for six months as soon as he returns to Brazil? Is money not a problem? And does his wife think everything is fine? I missed the context the most in Rwanda. Who did he take those pictures for, and who sent him? It looks like he was operating on his own. That seems a bit strange to me. How do you get so caught up in a war zone? Since the infrastructure was broken he must have had special routes to reach his goal. And what purpose is that actually? Collecting as much suffering as possible on image? This also says something about himself.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van james_cameron

james_cameron

  • 6567 messages
  • 9479 votes

At the beginning of this documentary, director Wim Wenders suggests that we will get to know photographer Sebastião Salgado in a special way, but in the end this portrait is rather straightforward and not very in-depth. Which does not alter the fact that the photo reports that pass by are extremely powerful and above all confrontational. The photos taken in Ethiopia in the early 1980s are particularly impressive. This makes the documentary absolutely worthwhile, although it certainly could have been more.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original