Battle in Seattle | |
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Theatrical poster
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Directed by | Stuart Townsend |
Produced by | Mary Aloe |
Written by | Stuart Townsend |
Starring |
André Benjamin Jennifer Carpenter Woody Harrelson Martin Henderson Ray Liotta Connie Nielsen Michelle Rodriguez Channing Tatum Charlize Theron Ivana Miličević |
Music by | Massive Attack |
Cinematography | Barry Ackroyd |
Distributed by | Redwood Palms Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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111 minutes |
Country | United States Canada Germany |
Language | English |
Budget | US$8 million |
Box office | $886,461 |
Battle in Seattle is a 2007 political action film and the directorial debut of actor Stuart Townsend, who also wrote the screenplay. The story is based on the protest activity at the WTO Ministerial Conference of 1999. The film premiered on May 22, 2008 at the Seattle International Film Festival.
The film depicts the protest in 1999, as thousands of activists arrive in Seattle, Washington in masses to protest the WTO Ministerial Conference of 1999. The World Trade Organization is considered by protesters to contribute to widening the socioeconomic gap between the rich and the poor while it claims to be fixing it and decreasing world hunger, disease and death.
The movie takes an in-depth look at several fictional characters during those five days in 1999 as demonstrators protested the meeting of the WTO in Seattle's streets. The movie portrays conflicts between the peaceful protesters and a minority committing property destruction whose actions were widely covered by the media. Although the protest began peacefully with a goal of stopping the WTO talks, police began teargassing the crowd after it refused to clear the streets and the situation escalated into a full-scale riot and a State of Emergency that pitted protesters against the Seattle Police Department and the National Guard.
Though the film is based on actual events, the characters are fictional.
The film received mixed reviews from critics, earning a 54% positive rating from numerous reviews on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, as of January 2016[update]. The critical consensus was that the film, though "Well intentioned and passionate, this docu-drama about the 1999 WTO protests is heavier on politics than character development".New York Magazine called the film "a triumph", while Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the film 3 out of 4 stars and described it as "not quite a documentary and not quite a drama, but interesting all the same" and compared it to past political films like Medium Cool. According to EW.com, the film "sounds like a bad TV movie: a drama based on the protests that halted the 1999 World Trade Organization summit in Seattle. Yet Stuart Townsend re-creates it all with stunning passion and skill".