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poster
Netflix
56
6.7
/73434/
72
/6766/
66
/1705/
3.1
/28847/
41
/186/
46
/256/
49
/40/
cc age 16+

Gold (2016)
Kenny Wells, a modern-day prospector, hustler, and dreamer, is desperate for a lucky break. Left with few options, Wells teams up with an equally luckless geologist to execute a grandiose, last-ditch effort: to find gold deep in the uncharted jungle of Indonesia.
poster
?
7.3
/26/
20
/1/
60
/1/

Marsinah: Cry Justice (2002)
From the real life story of Marsinah, an Indonesian activist that was kidnapped & found dead on May 1993 after a demonstration act.
poster
?
7.4
/46/
50
/2/
63
/3/

The Poet (2000)
The poet Ibrahim Kadir plays himself in a political drama about his arrest and incarceration in Aceh in the 1960s. Kadir survived the mass murder of suspected communists by the Indonesian government that cost between 500,000 and two million lives.
poster
?
7.7
/47/
45
/2/
60
/1/

Apartheid Did Not Die (1998)
An analysis of South Africa's new, democratic regime.
poster
70
?
7.8
/277/
67
/11/
66
/8/

The New Rulers of the World (2001)
The myths of globalisation have been incorporated into much of our everyday language. "Thinking globally" and "the global economy" are part of a jargon that assumes we are all part of one big global village, where national borders and national identities no longer matter. But what is globalisation? And where is this global village? In 2001, John Pilger made 'The New Rulers of the World', a film exploring the impact of globalisation. It took Indonesia as the prime example, a country that the World Bank described as a 'model pupil' until its 'globalised' economy collapsed in 1998. Globalisation has not only made the world smaller. It has also made it interdependent. An investment decision made in London can spell unemployment for thousands in Indonesia, while a business decision taken in Tokyo can create thousands of new jobs for workers in north-east England.


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