Opération SalAMI: les profits ou la vie?

par Magnus Isacsson, Malcolm Guy & Anna Paskal
Ce documentaire suit les préparatifs d’une action symbolique pour bloquer la grande Conférence internationale de Montréal sur l’Accord multilatéral sur les investissements (AMI).
1999  ·  53m  ·  Canada
Français
Français (sous-titres)
À propos du film

L’opération SalAMI était une action de désobéissance civile en mai 1998.

Le 25 mai 1998, environ 200 manifestant·e·s bloquent l’accès au centre Sheraton de Montréal dans une protestation contre les répercussions négatives de cet accord. Les manifestants faisaient partie d’un réseau citoyen appelé Opération SalAMI, opposé aux accords de libre-échange ; ils ont exigé que le Canada se retire des négociations sur l’Accord multilatéral sur les investissements (AMI). Cet accord était censé être le modèle du libre-échange mondial que les manifestants considéraient comme le contrôle corporatif de la planète. L’action a été l’un des événements anti-AMI les plus importants au monde. Ces mobilisations à l’échelle internationale ont en effet conduit à la mise à l’écart de l’accord.

Le mouvement Opération SalAMI a été largement couvert par les médias et a mobilisé des centaines de participants, dont beaucoup ont été arrêtés. C’était un combat clé de l’époque, riche d’enseignements pour les militants.

Projections à venir

Restez à l'écoute pour des projections à venir!

Cinéast.e.s
Magnus Isacsson, Malcolm Guy, Anna Paskal
Écrivain.e.s
Magnus Isacsson, Malcolm Guy, Anna Paskal
Musique
Les Colocs
Société de production
Productions Multi-Monde
Editeur.e.s
Meiyen Chen, Louise Coté
Acteur·rice·s
Linda Hanna, Freya Mackenzie, Sébastien Rivard, Viviane White
À propos du cinéaste

Malcolm Guy

Malcolm Guy is a director and producer of documentary and fiction films, President and co-founder of Productions Multi-Monde. Malcolm is active in immigrant rights organisations and in the independent film community. He contributed to establishing the international film fest Rencontres International du Documentaire de Montréal (RIDM), the Observatoire du Documentaire, the distribution company Les Films du 3 Mars, and is active in DOC (the Documentary Organisation of Canada). Malcolm’s films look at a variety of local and international issues, with a particular interest in the Philippines. He is a founding member of the Centre for Philippine Concerns in Montreal and is Secretary General of the International League of Peoples’ Struggle.

 
D'autres films de Malcolm Guy

Magnus Isacsson

Telling dramatic stories which bring crucial social and political issues to the attention of the public – that was Magnus Isacsson’s objective as a documentary filmmaker. In the last fifteen years, he specialized in feature length “process films”, following conflictual situations over long periods of time. Power (Cineflix 1996), told the five-year story of how the Cree Indians defeated Hydro-Québec’s Great Whale megaproject. The film received the award for best documentary at the Paris International Environmental Film Festival in 1997 and the Grand Prize of the Lausanne festival in 1999.  The Choir Boys (Érézi 1999) about Montreal’s choir of homeless men, was nominated for several major Canadian awards and received the Golden Conch at the Mumbai International festival in 2000. The feature length View from the Summit,  (Érézi 2002) is a multi-faceted view of the politics of protest, which the Globe and Mail called “remarkable…riveting”.  Isacsson also co-directed Pressure Point (Multi-Monde 1999), a film on the same theme that received the Quebec Film Critics award for Best Documentary in 2000. Maxime, McDuff and McDo  (Virage), his second film on attempts to unionize McDonald’s restaurants, was nominated for three Gémeaux awards.  Isacsson’s most recent films are ‘The Battle of Rabaska’ ( with Martin Duckworth, ONF 2008) and Art in Action (Amazone Films 2009) which received the Prix Gémeaux for best portrait or biography in 2011. Isacsson received the 2004 Prix Lumières from the Quebec directors’ association. ( ARRQ.)

Magnus Isacsson was born in Sweden in 1948. He immigrated to Canada in 1970 and became a Canadian citizen in 1978. He is fluent in Swedish, English and French and understands Spanish. After studying political science at the Universities of Stockholm and Montreal, Isacsson started his career as a radio producer for Swedish Broadcasting and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation from 1972 to 1980. From 1980 to 1986 he directed numerous current affairs reports and investigative stories for the English and French television networks of the CBC, for programs such as Le Point, Contrechamp and The Fifth Estate.

Isacsson taught audiovisual production at l’INIS, the Quebec film school, and at several universities, including Whitman College in Washington State, the University of Montreal and Concordia U. In the mid-eighties he taught video production in Zimbabwe and South Africa for Montreal-based Vidéo Tiers Monde (Third World Video). He directed an instructional tape on video production, which received the award for best audiovisual production from the Association for Audiovisual Teaching Techniques in 1991. He was a member and former co-chair of the Documentary Association of Canada (DOC), a member of the Association des Réalisateurs et Réalisatrices du Québec (ARRQ), and of SARTEC. He was also vice-president of the Observatoire du documentaire.

Isacsson passed away in 2012.

 
D'autres films de Magnus Isacsson

Anna Paskal

Anna Paskal is senior policy adviser with Food Secure Canada. She is also a consultant supporting collective policy development processes, organizational change, civil society advocacy, evaluation, strategic planning and facilitation.

In addition to directing Opération SalAMI: Les Profits Ou La Vie?, she has published The Water Gods: The Inside Story of a World Bank Project in Nepal (2000) with Véhicule Press, documenting a trek into Nepal’s Arun Valley, site of a proposed two billion dollar World Bank-funded dam.

 

Share

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Tumblr
StumbleUpon
Pocket
Telegram
Email

Partager

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Tumblr
StumbleUpon
Pocket
Telegram
Email