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Inequality for All
2015 88m PG
Documentary
8.0
90%
88%
75%
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A documentary that follows former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich as he looks to raise awareness of the country's widening economic gap.
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Directed By
Jacob Kornbluth
Studio
72 Productions
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+ 4 more
Cast of Inequality for All
Robert Reich
Self
Dolly Parton
Doralee Rhodes (archive footage)
Tyne Daly
Mary Beth Lacey (archive footage)
Lily Tomlin
Violet Newstead (archive footage)
Mary Tyler Moore
Mary Richards (archive footage)
Candice Bergen
Murphy Brown (archive footage)
Jon Stewart
Self (archive footage)
Sharon Gless
Christine Cagney (archive footage)
Conan O'Brien
Self (archive footage)
Barack Obama
Self (archive footage)
Hillary Clinton
Self (archive footage)
Bill Clinton
Self (archive footage)
George H. W. Bush
Self (archive footage)
George W. Bush
Self (archive footage)
Alan K. Simpson
Self
Inequality for All Reviews
The Playlist
Katie Walsh
That a documentary about economics could be so personally emotional and affecting is remarkable. And to learn from Reich in this film, as his students at Berkeley do, is a treat and a privilege.
Chicago Sun-Times
Bruce Ingram
Reich manages to infuse this enlightening/infuriating documentary on extreme income disparity in the United States, and the corollary marginalization of the middle class, with an optimistic spirit. One that may or may not be justified.
Detroit News
Tom Long
Overall, this film is enlightening, entertaining and seriously alarming.
Orange County Register
Michael Sragow
This documentary would be a rousing David and Goliath story even if its hero weren't the diminutive Robert B. Reich.
Washington Post
John DeFore
Any politician hoping to redistribute America's wealth should screen it before every stump speech.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
Reich is no condescending intellectual. He has no contempt for people of the opposite point of view. He even has nice things to say about Bill O'Reilly.
Christian Science Monitor
Peter Rainer
It's unseemly, I know, to praise a movie like this for the stand-up-comic affability of its host. But Reich's engagingness also gives credence to the seriousness of his message.
Entertainment Weekly
Owen Gleiberman
Robert Reich, a secretary of labor under President Clinton, leads us through a sharp-eyed essay-meditation on the rising trend of income inequality.
Dallas Morning News
Sheryl Jean
The film is as much about Reich as income inequality, a topic he has written and talked about for decades. You'll learn why he's 4 feet 10.5 inches tall and why he became active in social politics.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
Reich is funny, poignant, passionate.
New York Post
Kyle Smith
A cinematic listicle of misleading economic talking points.
Seattle Times
John Hartl
This lively film takes a "greatest-hits" approach to Reich, who fears that we're headed for another financial debacle if we don't take a more serious approach to taxes and education.
RogerEbert.com
Susan Wloszczyna
If you like your movie stars to be smart, engaging, well-spoken, self-deprecating and Danny DeVito-size, you couldn't do much better than this leading authority on economics who served under presidents Ford, Carter and Clinton.
New York Times
Nicolas Rapold
Mr. Reich ties together his talking points with a reasonable-sounding analysis and an unassuming warmth sometimes absent from documentaries charting America's economic woes.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
[Robert Reich] headlines this documentary in which he explains his views about the United States' current economic woes. It's something he manages to do engagingly and with great clarity.
The Dissolve
Keith Phipps
An advocacy doc constructed to make a clear political point first and function as a film a distant second.
leonardmaltin.com
Leonard Maltin
Filmmaker Kornbluth personalizes this story by using Reich's warmth and humor to win us over and keep his presentation from becoming a dry recitation of facts.
TheWrap
Alonso Duralde
If you're looking for a streamlined explanation for the mess the U.S. economy's in, and how we might get out, it's as good a place to start as any.
Los Angeles Times
Kenneth Turan
Smart, funny and articulate, Robert Reich is the university professor we all wish we'd had. He's so accessible and entertaining he takes a subject that sounds soporific and makes it come alive like you wouldn't believe in "Inequality for All."
Boston Globe
Peter Keough
Presents Reich's position by patching together lectures from his "Wealth & Poverty" course at the University of California, Berkeley.
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