Sony Pictures Classics | Release Date: March 27, 2015
8.2
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Universal acclaim based on 42 Ratings
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8
FilmPhonicJul 24, 2015
Wenders begins the film explaining the Greek origins of the word photography as “drawing with light” and establishing that people are “the salt of the earth”, photojournalist Sebastião Salgado is therefore the artist who draws the light ofWenders begins the film explaining the Greek origins of the word photography as “drawing with light” and establishing that people are “the salt of the earth”, photojournalist Sebastião Salgado is therefore the artist who draws the light of humanity, sometimes from the darkest places imaginable… and illuminates the majesty of the planet we’ve made our own, for better or worse.

It’s hard to believe that what is essentially a 2 hour narrated slideshow cut with limited modern video could be so compelling, but like all great documentarians, Wenders knows when to stay out of the way and let the subject and in this case the pictures tell the story, and believe us they are worth considerably more than a thousand words.

‘The Salt of the Earth’ spans Salgado’s intertwined personal & professional life following his 40 years of witnessing some of the most harrowing and monumental events around the world, from living with the indigenous people of the Andes to capturing the horrors of the Ethiopian famine in the mid 1980’s, capturing the extinguishing of the blazing Kuwaiti oil fields at the end of the 1st Gulf war to bearing witness to the Rwandan genocide of the mid 1990’s.

It’s quite remarkable how black & white photos set to a solid score can often be more evocative than moving pictures, many of the images of death in the film are hard to take as they linger to great effect, but like the great Akira Kurosawa once said “being an artist means not having to avert one’s eyes” and Salgado certainly doesn’t, his interviews and narration give the images a political and emotional context which also enhances the experience as a whole.

Like he did for music with ‘Buena Vista Social Club’ and dance with ‘Pina’, Wenders produces a tribute to the artistry of photography and shines a light on the remarkable life on one artist in particular, Salgado comes off like a man who sees what’s in front of his lens as more than a subject and takes a piece of everything he captures with him, although there is some light at the end of this tunnel Salgado does not offer a solution to the darkest parts of the human condition, but then again who can?

The Bottom Line…
Painfully compelling and impossible to forget, ‘The Salt of the Earth’ is often hard to watch but you can’t quite avert your eyes, as you shouldn’t, one of the more powerful documentaries in recent memory and perhaps the most vivid lesson in modern history you’re likely to have.
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3 of 3 users found this helpful30
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4
mmweissMay 24, 2015
The film boils down to an ego trip, in which Salgado presents himself as a life-changing "true artist". It gets really repetitive and annoying after awhile.
1 of 1 users found this helpful10
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6
Brent_MarchantApr 3, 2015
A beautifully photographed but poorly organized documentary that has trouble making up its mind what it's actually trying to be. The film often feels like it's reaching to make a point that it can't quite articulate, and the flow isA beautifully photographed but poorly organized documentary that has trouble making up its mind what it's actually trying to be. The film often feels like it's reaching to make a point that it can't quite articulate, and the flow is frequently interrupted by changes in tone, direction and content, as well as an occasionally overly intrusive presence by the filmmakers in the finished product. What could have easily been an elegant, aesthetically appealing collection of noble insights about man and his place in the world unfortunately gets bogged down in choppy execution, keeping the film from fully living up to its potential. Expand
2 of 4 users found this helpful22
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9
emkadvJun 12, 2015
This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. The photography alone makes this film worth the price of admission. Directors Salgado and Wenders include photos and videos from all over the world to tell the story of an excellent photographer, Salgado's father. The photographer tells stories of nature but also stories of human beings, "the salt of the earth" as he calls them. He is not afraid to show the inhumanity of man to man, either.

His story reminds me a little of Candide; the photographer demonstrates that this is not the best of all possible worlds, often because of human cruelty, but in the end he finds redemption in cultivating his garden, in a manner of speaking.
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0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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8
LeZeeOct 14, 2016
The pictures tell us all the story, and when it does, you'll be heartbroken!

This was nominated for the Oscars, but did not win. I should have watched it earlier, but I don't know how I forgot it and moved on. Recently noticed that I've
The pictures tell us all the story, and when it does, you'll be heartbroken!

This was nominated for the Oscars, but did not win. I should have watched it earlier, but I don't know how I forgot it and moved on. Recently noticed that I've missed it, so finally gave it a try and I really liked, but very sad to learn what the film narrated. This is a biopic, an aged photographer who traveled world revealed his experience with those horrifying encounters the humanity ever saw. From South America to Europe and Africa to Pacific Asia, he takes us back to the 70s, 80s and the 90s. His pictures tell us all the story, but when he explain more surround those pictures when he had taken them, that's where not just me, anybody who sees this documentary would be heartbroken.

Initially I thought it was just a photo exhibition from the past 40- 50 years of his life, but after the opening few minutes, it kicked off from Brasil to the different parts of the world, like how people suffered from our own mistakes. Also the nature like the oil fields in Iraq, polar and sea animals, tribes, all are very fascinating, as well as upsets with the facts that causing all those troubles. Before watching this I thought it might tell about actual salt of the Earth, the chemistry, to brief its past, present and future. But what the film revealed was shocking and at a time, thanks for being very bold, for the present world, it definitely needed.

This is just one man's experience, we don't know what might have happened behind when there is no camera to capture the moment and to tell the story to the rest of the world. A must see film, a documentary film like this is never late to see, even if it takes a lifetime to watch, you must take that chance and do that before you die. I have seen lots of documentaries like this, but this is not a message deliverer, it just finger pointed to our mistakes. You will learn some of the history that you ever learnt from your school, college textbooks or from your own journey around the world. So definitely these pictures are priceless. Not to admire, but to remind not to repeat in the future. I hope you watch it right away after reading my review.

8/10
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0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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9
lunanulJan 6, 2016
One of the most intense moviegoing experiences of the year. Multiple moments of absolutely stunning beauty and horror. Does that sound like a recommendation? It is.
0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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10
RhetoricianOct 27, 2015
This is the best movie that I have seen this year. I watched in on a transatlantic flight, not knowing what it was. I found myself sobbing in the dark at the beauty and tragedy of the narrative of the documentary and tragic images ofThis is the best movie that I have seen this year. I watched in on a transatlantic flight, not knowing what it was. I found myself sobbing in the dark at the beauty and tragedy of the narrative of the documentary and tragic images of Salgado's photographs. "Everyone in the world should see these images," he says at one point, "so that they know how cruel we can be." This film changed my perspective and made me think about international events of my lifetime in a way that I never had before. I have yet to talk to anyone else who has seen this. I hope that will change. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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10
alejandro970Apr 16, 2017
Absorbing documentary of the long odyssey of photographer Sebastiao Salgado. Touching pictures that mixes the beauty of nature and the human tragedy, some of them are heart breaking so breathless. A shall to see.
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