The Yes Men [2004]
|
| List Price: | £15.99 |
| Price: | £7.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
7 new or used available from £7.97
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #22084 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-05-23
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Anamorphic, PAL
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 83 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Two average guys who are mistaken for World Trade Organization representatives accept invitations to attend international meetings and make TV appearances on behalf of the U.S. They are the Yes Men, part of a group of comedians and activists who organize harmless pranks to spark political debate. Here, two members of the group, Andy and Mike, embark on several adventures, all of which are caught on film with utter hilarity, and which show viewers some disturbing realities. The film starts when one of the Yes Men's projects, a fake web site called GATT.org that imitates the WTO site, is taken to be real thing. Though the Yes Men's site parodies the concepts of the WTO in an attempt to voice their opposition to its policies, this detail goes overlooked by certain unscrupulous international organizers. For example, the Yes Men respond with glee to an invitation to attend a textile conference in Finland. They quickly go to work designing a costume for their presentation--a skintight gold bodysuit equipped with an inflatable phallus on which is mounted a TV screen. Hilarious footage of the faked presentation and its content--comparing current third-world labor practices to the slave trade--is simply unbelievable. However, the Yes Men's point is made loud and clear when nobody reacts: if you're the WTO, you can get away with anything. Further hijinks ensue, making THE YES MEN a fabulous, funny, and surprising film.
Customer Reviews
Funny and insightful documentary
This documentary looks at anti-corporate pranksters The Yes Men, who created a website intended to parody the World Trade Organisation but discovered that many folks didn't understand it was a joke. People thought they really were a part of the WTO, so when The Yes Men found themselves invited to speak at seminars and on news programmes, they went along with the intention of having a little satirical fun, offering lectures on subjects like slavery that they fully expected would get them chased out of town. And still, nobody got the joke, so they kept on doing it, hoping that by poking fun at some of the nastier aspects of globalisation they could shine a light on the damage being done by big businesses in their relentless pursuit of higher profits.
In the tradition of Michael Moore (who's on hand to offer his comments on the poverty produced by all this corporate greed), this is a funny film that has a serious side to it. What you get is not a look at big business types who are too stupid and humourless to understand when they're being satirised, but rather a kind of accidental insight into one possible reason why so many awful things happen in the name of money. The attendees at these lectures are not, it turns out, a bunch of idiots incapable of getting a joke, but actually intelligent and reasonable people so inured by the system they represent they simply aren't paying proper attention. No matter how absurd the suggestion (including selling your vote on the internet), it just washes over the crowd, most of whom seem more bored than anything else. It's interesting to see the contrast when The Yes Men give a presentation to a group of college students, who still don't get it's a joke, but at least they're angry about it and prepared to challenge the appalling notion that recycling human waste is a good way to provide food for poor countries.
If you're a fan of documentary film making, particularly when it uses humour to get its point across, this one is well worth a look. There are some very funny moments (I was amazed that Yes Men Mike and Andy were able to do what they did while keeping a straight face) and although it can be a little depressing to see how large a part apathy and inculcation play in allowing venality to run rampant, the film does at least offer some hope that things might change in the future.
A dose of reality
It isn't about whether this video is well made. It's what the video's about that matters. It gives a dose of the hysterically funny and, when you ponder on it, terribly frightening, reality in this increasingly corporate-controlled world that manages to create the world of 1984, where 2+2=5.
Picture a couple of clever young men giving a demonstration of a "survival suit" for the disasters of global warming to a bunch of corporate middle-level managers. The suit is an inflatable ball that turns the wearer into a giant silver thingie with stuff stuck all over it and no part of the wearer showing but a face. Now, picture the audience sucking it up, taking the entire thing seriously.
Picture the same young men showing another corporate group of elites an inflatable suit that gives the wearer a giant, head-height male-part-of-body [Amazon won't allow the correct anatomical word], while the onlookers accept the entire thing as plausible and for their benefit.
This is the reality shown by The Yes Men. If you're aware of how insane the corporate world (and everything it touches) has become, then this video is hysterically funny. If you aren't aware of just how off-center things have become, then you MUST watch so you can see how utterly in-their-own-world corporations and their minions have become.
"Changing the world one prank at a time"
"The Yes men" is an interesting documentary that tells us about the activities of some young men that took upon themselves an interesting task: identity correction. Does that sound strange? Well, as a matter of fact it is strange, but it is also very interesting.
This story is somewhat weird, but at the same time pretty straightforward. Andy and Mike are anti-globalization protestors that thought that the World Trade Organization was doing terrible things, but making public statements that were completely different to its actions. As a result, they decide to steal the WTO's identity, in order to give it a true face.
Andy and Mike set up a website with a very similar address to the website of the World Trade Organization, and their website is in fact mistaken for the WTO official website by many. That is the reason why Andy and Mike end up being invited to conferences all over the world, and giving lectures too weird to be real, but based on reality.
All in all, I think that this is a documentary you will like. It is funny and not overly serious, but makes you think. Not to be missed!
Belen Alcat

![The Yes Men [2004]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51GVKVKJF3L._SL210_.jpg)

![The Fog Of War [2004]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51G0JHDNFKL._SL75_.jpg)

![The War On Democracy [2007]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41zXovhZkKL._SL75_.jpg)