Amazon Studios presents
An Evergreen Pictures Production
GENERATION WEALTH
A FILM BY LAUREN GREENFIELD
RUNNING TIME: 106 minutes
OFFICIAL SELECTION:
2018 Sundance Film Festival – World Premiere
2018 SXSW Film Festival
PRESS NOTES
Distributor Contact:
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Press Contact NY/Nat’l:
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Press Contact LA/Nat’l:
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Arianne Ayers
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Ryan Werner
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Nancy Willen
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George Nicholis
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Courtney Ott
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ACME PR
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Magnolia Pictures
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Cinetic Media
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nancywillen@acmepr.net
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(212) 924-6701 phone
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ryan@cineticmedia.com
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(310) 963-3433
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publicity@magpictures.com
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courtney@cineticmedia.com
(212) 204-7979
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SYNOPSIS
For the past 25 years acclaimed photographer and filmmaker Lauren Greenfield (The Queen of Versailles, Thin, kids+money, #likeagirl) has travelled the world, documenting with ethnographic precision and an artist’s sensitivity a vast range of cultural movements and moments. Yet, after so much seeking and searching, she realized that much of her work pointed at one uniting phenomenon: wealth culture. With her new film, Generation Wealth, she puts the pieces of her life’s work together for in an incendiary investigation into the pathologies that have created the richest society the world has ever seen. Spanning consumerism, beauty, gender, body commodification, aging and more, Greenfield has created a comprehensive cautionary tale about a culture heading straight for the cliff’s edge. Generation Wealth, simultaneously a deeply personal journey, rigorous historical essay, and raucously entertaining expose, bears witness to the global boom-bust economy, the corrupted American Dream and the human costs of capitalism, narcissism and greed.
AN INTERVIEW WITH LAUREN GREENFIELD
Q: Could you talk about how you began your ongoing, multi-format investigation of wealth? You’ve mounted a major photography show, published a book, and are now finishing a documentary film.
A: I’ve been looking at consumerism and how the values of consumerism have taken over the American Dream for as long as I’ve been a photographer, about 25 years. I started working on the book and a show about this wealth project during the economic crash in 2008, and began devoting myself full-time to it in 2012. While going through audio and video of characters from my photography work dating back to the early 1990s, I realized that these years were not just the 25 years that I had been a photographer, but that this was a period marked by a greater historical transformation in our culture and in our values. This was an era informed by the character of Gordon Gekko and by Reagan’s policies, one in which media expanded rapidly, and globalization became a force. It was also a time that produced the kind of saturation marketing and advertising culture we live in now. So that kind of drove the journey. I wanted to figure out how this had happened, to go back and look through the pictures, look at the way we changed through my documentation of all of these related events. At a certain point, I realized that I need ed to make a feature-length documentary to tell the story.
Q: There are so many different ways you could have gone with this film, so many examples out there of conspicuous wealth. How did you place limits on your scope?
A: It was a huge challenge. When we started, we had 4”x6” index cards—like scene cards—but each one was a different character. They covered an entire wall. It was overwhelming and hard to figure out where to start. It was a huge process of winnowing everything down. You can’t have everything in a film, and the nature of my work is very expansive and essayistic. It really depends on multiple characters and on repetition, on seeing that the same things are happening in Iceland, California, Florida and Dubai. Yet, in a movie, this kind of repetition can become tedious very quickly. I would say that we really pursued almost all of the narrative threads, and, in the end, there were several characters that really had their own arcs and their own evolutions that I found incredibly compelling and also spoke to the bigger issues of the idea of “generation
wealth.” Even so, the first cut was probably 4.5 hours. Luckily, after a marathon edit and many hours spent staring at the wall of photos and cards, we found a balance between the fascinating stories of a small group of characters, and the larger essay.
Q: Your story, your own personal relationship with wealth becomes part of the film. Can you talk about making that leap?
A: Making this film was a really challenging creative journey. Much of it evolved in the edit room, and I ended up spending thirty months in the edit, which is probably three times longer than I’ve spent on any other movie. I had always intended to be a part of the movie as a narrator, but as the process went on, it ended up becoming more personal. My work is really intimate with people, and I have this really close access and trust with my subjects so we’re able to tackle really hard things. It just seemed kind of natural in the course of making this film that I also had to turn the camera on myself and consider why I was attracted to these subjects and why I had been returning to these questions about the culture of consumerism for so long. A big part of my work, though, is about how we’re all complicit. This made it seem natural to look at my own part in it. I’m the connective tissue of this serendipitous photographic, sociological, and character-driven deep dive into this one subject.
A: It does seem as though Generation Wealth is a kind of conscious summation of themes you’ve explored throughout your career.
Q: While making my second film, The Queen of Versailles, during the financial crash, I had an insight: all of this work I had done, in different media, all over the world, was all connected, and told a story about what we have become as a society. If you’re not happy with a 25,000 square foot house, and you’re building a 90,000 square foot house, that’s kind of a metaphor for how we’re never happy with what we have, right? My first movie, Thin, was about eating disorders, and what I realized in that film was that it was really about addiction, and that all addictions are about numbing pain or numbing trauma and that it doesn’t really matter whether it’s drugs or alcohol or eating disorder or cutting, they all have the same effect. In many ways, I realized consumerism and the desire for more was a similar, pathological addiction. The financial crash
and the specter of climate change made it feel really important to make Generation Wealth now because we are on an unsustainable path in terms of the environment, in terms of values, in terms of family, in terms of community.
Q: With so many possible avenues to explore, so many characters and so many filmmaking modes in play, how do you, then, go about structuring a film like this?
A: The first half of the movie is more of an essay exploring many of the themes of generation wealth. The framing is my photographic journey and a historical essay about the way we have changed over the last 25 years. I’m a part of it, but really as guide to show where the photographic work comes from, and how it developed. We tried to go through the ideas very thematically, from consumerism to beauty and gender to sexual capital, to the commodification of human beings. And then we move to the idea that if people are being commodified, if one’s value, especially in the case of young girls, is your sexuality, then you can’t age. We kind of swim through all of these themes until we crash, literally in the financially crisis, and figuratively as many of the characters hit rock bottom. Once we crash, it’s really the characters and their insights that pull us out of it. In the second half of the film, the characters sweep us away as we move from thematic explorations with characters who represent ideas, to a more personal and emotional experience of the costs of generation wealth.
Q: It ends up being a very structurally risky work.
A: This is part of why the film took me so long and was such an evolution to complete. It’s part photographic journey of an artist, part historical essay, part character-driven narrative and part personal film. I tried to weave together all of those strands to tell a story that, in the end, is not about me, or about my work, or about the characters, but really a bigger story about where we’ve come to as a culture, and where we are as a society.
Q: I imagine you thought a lot about this during the process, but how do you display wealth on screen, and capture the flash and glamour of excess, while maintaining distance? How do you make sure your audience knows that you’re mounting a critique?
A: I’ve always tried to take people on a journey where there are things that draw you in, whether it is a photograph with a shiny surface, saturated colors, aspirational experiences, sexy bodies, the aesthetic of the popular culture, and then once you are hooked in, drawn to these things, I tell a very critical story that allows you to examine your own complicity. What I’m looking at is how we do all want these things. This want crosses class, borders, age and races. and so really what I’m looking at is that phenomenon, of wealth very broadly defined. And not just having money, but also wanting to look like you have it—that idea of “fake it ‘til you make it.” By featuring characters that have been on these journeys and have seen what it was like on the other side, we can benefit from their knowledge. I think that’s also the interesting thing about the film and about these characters—they are not traditional heroes, they are people who have taken very tough journeys. If you go into Generation Wealth thinking that it might be cool to be on Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, you’re going to come out with a different point of view.
Q: Can you think of other historical moments that echo what we’re experiencing in terms of wealth right now? Or is this totally unprecedented?
A: I definitely see similarities in both the fall of Rome and also the kind of Gatsby-esque gilded age, the feeling of dancing on the deck of the Titanic represented by the gold shoes under the title. I see this moment as a new Gilded Age, and it does have parallels in other times of decadence. Chris Hedges says in the beginning of the film that when societies have their greatest moments of wealth, this is generally the moment right before their death. I think the stakes are higher for us now, and I think that we feel that tension every day, particularly over this past year. A big part of what I am looking at in the wealth phenomenon is the idea that we used to compare ourselves to people that we knew, and would aspire to having what our neighbor had, and now we compare ourselves to the people we see on TV. Keeping up with the Joneses has become “Keeping Up with the Kardashians.” This is scientifically proven—when we see images of wealth in the media, we think that it is more common than it is, and that that stimulates our desire, and stimulates a very unrealistic desire, so there becomes this huge aspirational gap between what we want and what we can afford. I think that this drives a lot of our choices and caused the financial crash and is part of the culture that gave rise to Donald Trump. Generation Wealth references Kim Kardashian, the 5-digit Birkin bag and Donald Trump, but it is more
about the culture that made those three “phenomena” possible. I think that when you see these connections and see the things that are propelling your behavior, it gives them less power, and gives you more agency. Ultimately, that is what I try to do in my work—I attempt to connect the dots between cultural phenomena that we don’t always see as related, to expose the matrix that affects our daily choices. The characters in the film have had journeys that have woken them up in ways we can learn from.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
LAUREN GREENFIELD (Writer, Director, Producer)
Emmy-award-winning photographer/filmmaker, Lauren Greenfield, is considered a preeminent chronicler of youth culture, gender, and consumerism as a result of her monographs (Girl Culture, Fast Forward, THIN, Generation Wealth), and documentaries (THIN, kids+money, The Queen of Versailles). The Queen of Versailles won her the Best Documentary Director Award at Sundance Film Festival. Her viral ad, #LikeAGirl, swept commercial awards, including 14 Cannes Lions 2015, was named 3rd Best Ad of the Decade, and earned Greenfield the #1 director/Most Awarded Director by AdAge, the first woman to top this list. Her latest body of work, Generation Wealth, was released as a monograph (Phaidon Press) on May 2017 to rave reviews. The accompanying exhibition first opened in Los Angeles at the Annenberg Space for Photography on April 2017 and has since traveled to the International Center of Photography in New York City. It will open at the Nobel Peace Center (Oslo) on February 2018, after which it will travel to the Fotomuseum (The Hague) and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (Copenhagen). Her latest documentary film, Generation Wealth, will premiere on opening night of the Sundance Film Festival and will be released theatrically in 2018 by Amazon Studios.
Lauren Greenfield Filmography:
Generation Wealth (2018, 106 mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
Magic City (2015, Director’s Cut 30mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
The Bling Dynasty (2015, 30mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
The Queen of Versailles (2012, 100 mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
Beauty CULTure (2011, 30 mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
kids+money (2008, 32 mins), Director. Produced by Evergreen Pictures
THIN (102 mins, 2006), Director. Distributed by HBO
FRANK EVERS (Producer)
Frank Evers is the founder and executive producer of Evergreen Pictures, an award-winning production company that specializes in the production of documentary films (Generation Wealth, The Queen of Versailles, Magic City, Bling Dynasty, Beauty CULTture, kids+money, Fashion Show). In addition to running Evergreen Pictures, Frank is the CEO of INSTITUTE, an artist management and content distribution company representing world-renowned documentary photographers.
Frank is also the co-founder of the New York Photo Festival and the co-creator of The Future of Storytelling, two NY-based annual events that have attracted hundreds of thousands of participants since 2008. Between 1995 and 2005, Frank spent ten years in the video-game business, running product development and production for Activision, Vivendi, and Disney Interactive. During this time, his video games generated over $1 billion in global sales. Frank started in the film business with Sony Pictures Entertainment, and he later executive-produced the cult classic film Swimming with Sharks.
GENERATION WEALTH: THE CHARACTERS
Cathy: We meet Cathy as a 31-year-old school bus driver from Virginia, who goes to Brazil to undergo a tummy tuck, a breast augmentation, a nose job, liposuction, and a Brazilian butt lift—all without general anaesthesia and all paid for by credit card. Checking in with her in the years since then, we learn that fixing her body has created financial problems for Cathy and may have contributed to a family tragedy.
Florian: A 55-year-old former hedge-fund manager whose net worth was at one time $800 million, Florian has fled the United States to avoid arrest by the FBI on charges of defrauding investors. Released on a technicality after 15 months in an Italian prison, he now lives in his native Germany, which will not extradite him. He claims to regret his former fixation on making money, saying that he was trapped in his own ambition and a “hamster in a diamond-studded, gold wheel.”
Conrad: Conrad is Florian’s son, who reflects on growing up with vast wealth but a distant, absent father. Conrad recalls one effort at father-son bonding, when Florian, fed up with 15-year-old Conrad’s shyness around girls, took him to lose his virginity to a prostitute. Conrad paid with a jar of coins he’d collected.
Kacey/Daveney/Courtney: At age 22 a successful porn star sought after for her child-like physique, Kacey gained brief notoriety after Charlie Sheen paid her $30,000 for a days-long party that landed him in the hospital with a drug overdose. At 27, Kacey has seen the dark side of fame, posting a video of her suicide attempt on YouTube and going bankrupt from the ensuing medical bills, and decides to start fresh with a new name, a new body (breast implants and a nose job) and a pregnancy.
Valbjörn: A fisherman by trade, Valbjörn became one of many Icelanders who went to work in banks during the go-go years of the early 2000s, when the country made a highly leveraged bid to turn itself into a global financial center. He talks about the boom time, when he and others like him rushed to buy luxury cars and build houses with magazine-ready décor, saunas, and state-of-the-art appliances. Laid off when the 2008 financial crisis hit, Valbjörn returned to fishing and a quieter life that he says makes him happier.
Cliff (G-Mo): Greenfield met Cliff while working on her 1997 first book, Fast Forward, about growing up in Los Angeles. We meet Cliff in 1995 as a 20-year-old rapper called G-Mo making his first music video (“Ballin’”) and celebrating hip-hop’s new vision of the American Dream—being served lobster poolside by a beautiful, uniformed maid and counting stacks of cash. After the “Ballin” dream as a rapper didn’t work out, we find Cliff today as a down-to-earth and middle class father of six, who has taken to heart traditional values of family and education.
Mijanou: Another of Greenfield’s earliest subjects, Mijanou was popular as an 18-year-old Beverly Hills High School senior, winning the class’s “Best Physique” award. Now 42 and bringing up a daughter of her own, she recalls the damaging legacy of being shaped by the “male gaze,” which won her acceptance as an immigrant who was less well off than her peers.
Paris: In 1993 Greenfield’s lens captured Paris, the 16-year-old son of REO Speedwagon guitarist Kevin Cronin, as he partied out of control in a world where parents were largely absent. After years of struggling with drug addiction, Paris finally got sober at age 29. We see him here coming to terms with his own feelings of abandonment and inadequacy and his determination to be a loving father to his baby daughter.
Limo Bob: The self-proclaimed “Limo King,” Bob owns a fleet of limousines which includes the longest limousine in the world with a swimming pool and a helicopter landing pad. The Chicago native proudly shows off his trademark 33 pounds of gold and diamond jewelry .
Tiffany: Tiffany left her home in Kansas as a single mother to seek fame and fortune in Las Vegas. Now a leading VIP hostess, arranging high-end entertainment and attractive escorts she calls Arm Charms for celebrity clients, her son has to reckon with his mom’s choices which affect his own. She admits there are downsides to success in Vegas nightlife, saying, “You sell your soul to the devil.”
Suzanne: Suzanne was a 37-year-old hedge-fund executive when Greenfield photographed her for a story on women who spent large sums on personal maintenance. Suzanne spends her 30’s focused on making money and building her successful career. She postpones childbearing and at age 40, Greenfield follows her struggle to conceive a child, as she goes through 25 IVF cycles and eventually hires a surrogate to bear her baby.
CREDITS
AMAZON STUDIOS PRESENTS
AN EVERGREEN PICTURES PRODUCTION
A LAUREN GREENFIELD FILM
GENERATION WEALTH
Written and Directed by Lauren Greenfield
Produced by Frank Evers
Produced by Lauren Greenfield
Produced by Wallis Annenberg
Executive Producers
Regina K. Scully
Lilly Hartley & Jeffrey Tarrant
Geralyn Dreyfous
Music by Jeff Beal
Edited by
Aaron Wickenden, ACE
Michelle Witten
Victor Livingston
Dan Marks
Line Producer Jennifer Kobzik
Consulting Producers Danielle Renfrew Behrens
Keven McAlester
Cinematography
Robert Chappell
Lauren Greenfield
Shana Hagan
Jerry Risius
Lars Skree
Generation Wealth Photo Editor
and Exhibition Curator Trudy Wilner Stack
Editorial Consultants Mary Lampson
Robb Moss
Pedro Kos
Co-Producers
Sandra Keats
Julie Frankel
Associate Producer Keri Oberly
Additional Cinematography
Tom Hurwitz
Sarah Levy
Joshua Mayes
David Morrison
Brian O’Carroll
Robert Richman
Jenna Rosher
Malik Sayeed
Sascha Schöberl
Second Camera Operators - (2 columns)
Micah Bisagni
Margaret Byrne
Brooke Jagneaux
Josh Kesner
Arnar Thorisson
Nathan Wilson
Photo/Camera Assistants (2 columns)
Andy Rocchelli
Peter Wintersteller
Keri Oberly
Jared Mechaber
Terence Patrick
Alyson Aliano
Chris Birck
Cody Burrows
Yuriy Chichkov
Conor Fleming
Kevin Fox
Spencer Grundler
Matthias Arni Ingimarsson
Daniel Prokofiev
John Schoenfeld
Billy Yates
Location Sound Recordists
Alan Barker
Scott Beatty
Árni Benediktsson
A. Tad Chamberlain
Fernando Delgado
Pétur Einarsson
Eick Hoemann
Michael Jones
Michael Kool
Terence Lloren
Trevor McKenna
Peter Miller
Mark Patino
Richard Pooler
Zach Porter
Liu Qi
Igor Ushankov
Qiao Xin
Researchers Susan Lynley Welsh
Archival Researcher Michelle Sullivan
Field Producers/Fixers María Lea Ævarsdóttir
Anton Cherenkov
Jutta Feit
Tchavdar Georgiev
Ingrid Goodwin
Nausheen Ishtiaq-Chen
Olga Izakson
Maya Lilly
Sergey Rezanov
Ellen Xu
Production Coordinators Carley Mostar
Robin Rose Singer
Jessica Toscano
Location DITs Peter Belov
Mike McGee
Tim Roseman
Drone Operators Paris Cronin
Þórður K. Einarsson
Colm Hogan
Archivist Katie Moran
Production Assistants
Shelby Adair
Charlotte Acevedo
Maryann Buchanan
Colleen Cambier
Jenna Carlie
Tanawan Chairin
Jo Yee Chu
Kady Dulny
Parvin Guiv
Julie Latrémouille
Tony Le
Dani Jiaxin Li
Amanda Majors
Tyler McClelland
Lynn Millspaugh
Dave Minogue
Julie O’Brien
Maya Patel
Róbert Pétursson
Jenny Rennpening
Jordan Sevigny
Tracy Witsch
Ryan Wagner
Post Production Producer Jennifer Kobzik
Photographic Imaging and Printing Richard Maier
Presentation Reel Editor Chad Beck
Assistant Editor Jim Rosenthal
Gavin Segall-Abrams
Main Title/Graphics Design at Yankee Peddler Destroit
Creative Director Bill Sneed
Executive Producer Erica MacKinnon
Post Production Technical Coordinator Jim Rosenthal
DI Completed at Shed Los Angeles
Supervising Digital Colorist Yvan Lucas
Digital Colorist Billy Hobson
Digital Conform Editor Lisa Tutunjian
Assistant Digital Conform Editor Sam Ziaie
Finishing Producer Nick Monton
Associate Finishing Producer Amy Redfern
Imaging Scientist Matthew Tomlinson
Executive Producer Shed LA Paul O'Shea
Supervising Sound Editor & Sound Designer Peter Albrechtsen, MPSE
Dialogue Editor Jacques Pedersen
Sound Editor Lars Halvorsen
Assistant Sound Designer Mikkel Nielsen
Foley Artist Heikki Kossi, MPSE
Foley Mixer Kari Vähäkuopus
Sound Editing Facilities Offscreen
Foley Studio H5 Film Sound
Post-Production Sound Services by
Skywalker Sound
a Lucasfilm Ltd. Company
Marin County, California
Re-Recording Mixer Pete Horner
Assistant Re-recording Mixer Jeff King
Engineering Services Scott Levine
Digital Editorial Support David Peifer
Post-Production Sound Accountant Daniela Pontoriero
Post-Production Finance Manager Mike Peters
Client Services Eva Porter
Scheduling Carrie Perry
Skywalker Sound Executive Staff
General Manager Josh Lowden
Head of Production Jon Null
Head of Engineering Steve Morris
Score Conducted, Orchestrated & Recorded by Jeff Beal
Recorded at Many Rooms Music, Agoura Hills, CA
Additional Orchestration Marco Valerio Antonini
Music Editors Craig Pettigrew
Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz
VO Recording Facility The Village Studios
Margarita Mix
Additional Post Audio Facility Formosa Group
Twentieth Century Fox
Legal Services
Victoria Cook/Frankfurt Kurnit Klein + Selz, P.C.
Chris Perez, Kathryn R. Alimohammadi/ Donaldson + Callif, LLP
Marvin Putnam/Latham & Watkins LLP
Insurance Services Winnie Wong, Momentous Insurance Brokerage
Web/Book Design Project Projects
Publicity Nancy Willen/Acme PR
Production Accountant Tina Murphy Prouty
Distribution Advisor Josh Braun/Submarine Entertainment
Equipment Provided by Canon U.S.A.
Very Special Thanks
Deborah Aaronson
The Annenberg Space for Photography
Kate Amend
Rich Appel
Sara Bader
Joan Beal
Bob Berney
Kolbeinn Blandon
Shanah Blevins
Jennifer Brandel
Rhoda Brogan
Canon U.S.A.
Catherine Bull
Katie Cronin
Crossroads School
Pamela Gustava Curry
Jón Gauti Dagbjartsson
Ragga Eiríksdóttir
Francis & Brigitte Evers
Gabriel Evers
Noah Evers
Sean & Dyala Evers
Theresa Evers
Kristin Feeley
Sharin Fitter
Scott Foundas
Keith Fox
Devin Friedman
Siv Friðleifsdóttir
Chuck Garrett
Guðmundur Gíslason
David Glean
David Greenbaum
Matthew Greenfield
Patricia Greenfield
Sheldon Greenfield & Sherrie Kaplan
Princess Nataly Golitsyna
Mariza Gonzalez
Jill Goldman
Brian Groen
Kolbrún Halldórsdóttir
Kristin Hrafnkelsdóttir
Nicole Holofcener
Maria Homm
Ted Hope
Phil Hwang
Tabitha Jackson
Björn Jónsson
Ásgeir Jónsson
Dr. Stephen Josephson
Cinny Kennard
Simon Kilmurry
Per Kirkegaard
Sloane Klevin
Kathy Koester
Alex Kuczynski
Emmanuel Lubezki
Gerd Ludwig
Caryn Maclean
David McWilliams
Skúli Mogensen
Brett Morgen
Dan Neri
Barbara Norfleet
Brie Oh
Scott & Kristin Paton
Sam Polk
Krista Prestek
William Prior
Óttarr Proppé
Pamela Reis
Lucie Reiss
Joseph Resch
Michael Rothman
Juliet Schor
Deanna Sevigny
Daragh Sharkey
Matt Shonfeld
Haki Simsek
Jim Solomon
Bobby J Strauser
Lauren Strogoff
Oliver Stone
Union Editorial
Jamie Weintraub
Dr. Jessica Wu
Marina Zenovich
Special Thanks
Andy Abowitz
Rachel Abramowitz
Allison Amon
Artron Art Center Shenzhen
Paul Au
Artem Barinov
Amy Berg
Joe Beshenkovsky
Jason Bitner
Blue Lagoon
Iva Boteva/iRow Fitness Studio
Danny Breen
Walker Bunting
Columbia County Fair and Livestock Show
Condé Nast Entertainment
Ger Daly
Gigi de Pourtales Davis
Diesel Cars
Lucy Fisher
Hayley Fisk
Franny Flackett-Levin
Alisa Fliss
Sacha Frankfurt
Brooke Frederick
J.C. Gabel
Jim Gao
Jennifer Golub
Howard Gordon
Wade Graham
GQ
Shelly Guillory
Jón Örn Guðbjartsson
Matt Harvey
Celia Hoffman
Institute for Artist Management
Jesse Jacobsen-Gal
Katy Jarzebowski
Alexandra Johnes
Douglas & Francoise Kirkland
Kate Klausner
Chloe Korban
Joanna Kulesza
Labyrinth Books
Claire Ladd
Pat Lanza
Alina Lee
Guillermo Lemus
Mark Levin
Alessandra Lichtenfeld
Mark Lipson
Magic City
Michael Mailer
John McCormick
Chris McKinley
Lisa Mehling
Eileen Meyer
Keely Morrison
Susan Morrison
Andrew Nackerman
Jordan Naftalis
Rabbi Joel Nickerson
Old Library, Trinity College
Adam Parker
Richard Parks
Þorlákshöfn
Sara Reed
Davy Rothbart
Andrew Rubenstein
Jessie Rubin
Institute Sarita
Mady Sieracki
Kristen Scharler
Jeffrey, Lienna & Sasha Silver
Hanna Tannenbaum
Tatler Ball
The G Hotel
Mondrian Los Angeles
Phoenix Project Ireland
Trinity Business School
Michael Williams
Sara Joe Wolansky
Jamie Wolf
WOW Airlines
Jaclyn Wu
Ron Yerxa
Grace Yoon
Miranda Yousef
The filmmaker would like to thank her family and
the subjects of the photographs and film who generously shared their lives,
as well as the following writers and scholars on whose work she relied:
Brumberg, Joan Jacobs.
The Body Project an Intimate History
of American Girls. Vintage Books, 1998.
Easton Ellis, Bret. Less Than Zero.
Simon and Schuster, 1985.
Hedges, Chris.
Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy
and the Triumph of Spectacle.
Nation Books, 2009.
Kuczynski, Alex.
Beauty Junkies: inside Our $15 Billion
Obsession with Cosmetic Surgery.
Doubleday, 2006.
Lewis, Michael.
Boomerang.
W. W. Norton & Co, 2012.
Maier, Charles S.
Among Empires: American
Ascendancy and Its Predecessors.
Harvard University Press, 2006.
McWilliams, David.
Follow The Money: The Tale
of the Merchant of Ennis.
Gill & Macmillan, 2010.
---. The Pope's Children: The Irish
Economic Triumph and the Rise
of Ireland's New Elite.
1st ed., Wiley, 2008.
Norfleet, Barbara.
All the Right People.
Bullfinch Press, 1988.
Schor, Juliet B.
Born to Buy: A Groundbreaking Exposé
of a Marketing Culture That Makes
Children "Believe They Are What They Own."
(USA Today). Scribner, 2005.
---. The Overworked American: The
Unexpected Decline of Leisure.
BasicBooks, 1993.
---. The Overspent American: Why
We Want What We Don't Need.
HarperCollins, 1999.
Thomas C. O’Guinn and L.J. Shrum.
The Role of Television in the
Construction of Consumer Reality.
Journal of Consumer Research 23,
no. 4 (March 1997): 278-94.
Generation Wealth was published by Phaidon Press, 2017.
ISBN# 978-0714872124.
Available at Amazon.com and bookstores.
For Generation Wealth exhibition venues and dates,
visit www.generation-wealth.com.
Photos/Footage Courtesy of
"A Hike In The Dolomites,” Eric Lindqvist,
evmlphotography.weebly.com. All rights reserved.
ABCNEWS VIDEOSOURCE
ABC News VideoSource/ABC News/Getty Images
The Annenberg Foundation
AP Archive
Bloomberg LP
Limo Bob
Hans-Jurgen Burkard
Channel 2 News/365 Media
Gabby Chelliah
Jeremy Christensen
C-SPAN
Evergreen Pictures
Frank Evers
George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum
G-Mo
Lauren Greenfield Photography
Patricia Greenfield
Sheldon Greenfield & Sherrie Kaplan
interscience film
Institute for Artist Management
Gary Isaacson/Image Bank Film/Getty Images
ITN/ITN/Getty Images
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
Steve Mack/Getty Images
picture alliance / Tom Solo
Prelinger/Archive Films: Creative/Getty Images
Queen of Versailles, LLC
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
Stock Media provided by VideoFort/Pond5
TAESA, Boeing 727-24C. (MSN 19528/LN 465).
Guadalajara International Airport, (GDL/MMGL),
Jalisco, Mexico/November 26th, 2006./
Author: Ricardo Tomás Morales Centeno
Tribune Broadcasting - Joan De Jesus/
Tribune Broadcasting/Getting Images
WDR Köln
Music Courtesy of
"Already Knowing"
Written and Performed by Cool Amerika
Produced by (Buddah Bless) / Alliance Music Group
Courtesy of Alliance Music Group
"Ballin'"
Words and Music by McClifton T. Magee Jr., Randy Muller, Edward Thomas Magee Jr.
Performed by G-mo, Courtesy of McCliffton T Magee Jr.
(c) Songs Of Universal, Inc. on behalf of itself, Gimmemo Music, and Wit It Music/Universal Music Corp. on behalf of itself and One To One Music Publishing Co.
“Theme For Villain” by Joe Kraemer
“Perfect Crime” by Ashley Barnes, David Tobin, Jason Pedder and Jeff Meegan
Additional Material by
‘Less than Zero’/Simon & Schuster/Bret Easton Ellis
‘Less Than Zero’/Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation,
Amercent Films, American Entertainment Partners L.P./
Jon Avnet, Jordan Kerner/Mark Kanievska
‘SexTv - Episode: Girl Culture’/Jane Juska/Lynn Bianchi
‘Fast Forward: Growing up in the Shadow of Hollywood’/
Alfred A. Knopf and Melcher Media, Inc./Lauren Greenfield
MSNBC News
Crossroads School/Yearbook
‘Wall Street’/Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation,
Amercent Films, American Entertainment Partners L.P./
Edward R. Pressman/Oliver Stone
Magazine page: Das Unternehmen
Harvard Yearbook
'The Price is Right'/CBS/Mark Goodson Productions
‘Keeping Up With the Kardashians’, Season 1,
Episode 1 & Season 5, Episode 1/
E! Entertainment Television, Inc./
Bunim-Murray Productions (BMP),
Ryan Seacrest Productions
‘The Apprentice’, Season 1, Episode 1/
NBC/MGM Television, Trump Productions LLC,
Mark Burnett Productions
‘Girl Culture’/Chronicle Books/Lauren Greenfield
Con Estilo TV/Miss Universe 2013
The Hearst Corporation/Marie Claire/
‘Who Spends the Most on Looking Good?’/
Melissa Macron-Nitolo/2004
‘Thin’/HBO/Lauren Greenfield
‘Toddlers and Tiaras'/Season 2, Episode 18/
TLC/Authentic Entertainment
Kim Kardashian/’Superstar'
INK 361
Instagram
Facebook
Scoopla/’Charlie Sheen's Porn Star Cheque For Kacey Jordan’
Condé Nast/GQ/’Coke, Hookers, Hospital, Repeat.’/
Amy Wallace/2011
‘Not the Bradys XXX: Bradys Meet the Partridge Family’/
All Media Play, X-Play/Scoot David, Will Ryder
‘American Bukake 39'/Jeff Mike Productions
‘The Swan’/Season 1, episode 1/Fox Television/
Galan Entertainment
‘Let It Be’/The Beatles/Across the Universe
‘Gag Factor 30’/Jeff Mike Productions/Jim Powers
YouTube/JR
PopTvDotCom/’Kacey Jordan – Charlie Sheen’s Porno
Actress Girlfriend’
NewsFilter/’Pornstar Kacey Jordan,
who was banging Charlie Sheen,
attempts suicide during a webcam show’
Photographs © Lauren Greenfield/INSTITUTE
This program was supported by a grant from the Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program with support from
JustFilms | Ford Foundation
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute
In association with Candescent Films and Artemis Rising Foundation.
www.generation-wealth.com
© 2018 Evergreen Studio, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
This motion picture is protected by the copyright laws of the United States of America and other countries. Any unauthorized duplication, copying or use of all or part of this motion picture may result in civil liability and/or criminal prosecution in accordance with applicable laws.
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