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Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price Poster

Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price

2005 | 98m | English

(4625 votes)

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Popularity: 0.9 (history)

Director: Robert Greenwald
Writer:
Staring:
Details

This documentary takes the viewer on a deeply personal journey into the everyday lives of families struggling to fight Goliath. From a family business owner in the Midwest to a preacher in California, from workers in Florida to a poet in Mexico, dozens of film crews on three continents bring the intensely personal stories of an assault on families and American values.
Release Date: Nov 04, 2005
Director: Robert Greenwald
Writer:
Genres: Documentary
Keywords capitalism, department store, protest, community, middle class, big business, retail trade, consumerism, business, economics, corporation, walmart
Production Companies Brave New Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Lee Scott Himself - President & CEO of Wal-Mart (archive footage)
Don Hunter Himself - H&H Hardware Owner
Jon Hunter Himself - Son of Don Hunter
Jeremy Hunter Himself - Son of Jon Hunter
Matt Hunter Himself - Son of Jon Hunter
Johnny Faenza Himself - H&H Hardware Employee
Frank Mormino Himself - Owner of Middlefield Tire
John Bruening Himself - Owner of Geauga Vision (as Dr. John Bruening)
Tom Glassburner Himself - H&H Hardware Employee
Weldon Nicholson Himself - Wal-Mart Store Manager Trainer
Al Norman Himself - Founder of Sprawl-Busters
Grace Thibodeaux Herself - Hearne, Texas Resident
Diane DeVoy Herself - Wal-Mart Employee
Cathy Nemchik Herself - Wal-Mart Employee
Stan Fortune Himself - Wal-Mart District Loss Prevention Manager
Jon Lehman Himself - Wal-Mart Store Manager
Phenix Montgomery Himself - Wal-Mart Employee
Josh Noble Himself - Wal-Mart Employee
Donna Payton Herself - Wal-Mart Employee
Alicia Sylvia Himself - Wal-Mart Employee
Edith Arana Herself - Wal-Mart Inventory Specialist
Norberto Ricardo Himself - Wal-Mart UFCW Union Rep
Anthony J. Kuc Jr. Himself - Wal-Mart Assistant Manager (voice)
Name Job
Kristy Tully Director of Photography
Robert Greenwald Director
John Frizzell Original Music Composer
John Blair Field Director
Name Title
Jim Gilliam Producer
Devin Smith Producer
Robert Greenwald Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

LastCaress1972
N/A

Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price - a ninety-minute documentary demonising a massive company, and with no one from Wal-Mart prepared to go on record, there's no subjective balance. That said, they do look like horrible bastards, certainly in their native USA and in the Asian sweatshops where they ... manufacture their goods. The family themselves seem to have amassed 100 billion dollars between them, yet the employees can't afford the healthcare plan offered by the chain. A bunch of small towns are presented, showing how they've become virtual ghost towns as one business after another has folded. There are security cameras in their parking lots, but they're only used to monitor possible union activity or demonstrations. The rest of the time they're unmanned to save a wage and as a result Wal-Mart car-parks have become a haven for robberies, assaults, rapes, abductions and murders. Bangladeshi workers, making garments to be sold in store, work 14-hour days for 17 cents per hour and are literally beaten by the supervisors. An American inspector, a loyal employee of Wal-Mart in love with the company, was moved to tears by the conditions but upon reporting them to Wal-Mart, was promptly fired. Managers in stores stopped eating their lunches in the staff rooms because they would feel guilty sitting with employees who were so broke because of their terrible pay that they wouldn't have anything to eat on their hour breaks. Sweatshop workers in China were sent to live in the same dormitory, for which rent and utility bills were deducted from their pay. They were free to move out of the dormitory, but the rent would continue to be deducted anyway. The chinese workers are taught how to lie, and what lies to say to health inspectors who might visit the sweatshops. Gardening retail products containing pesticides and poisons are stored in car-parks, and when it rains those poisons run into the creek that provide a whole town with drinking water. There are examples all over the country of stores being fined for this practise. And so on, and so on. It's a damning piece of material on its own, but I think an attempt at hearing an alternate view might have made it even more powerful (in fairness, my understanding is not that Wal-Mart were not approached, but that they simply wouldn't co-operate). Anyway, 7/10, worth a look.

Jun 23, 2021