China Blue | |
---|---|
Directed by | Micha X. Peled |
Produced by | Micha X. Peled |
Cinematography | Micha X. Peled |
Edited by | Manuel Tsingaris |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United States |
China Blue is a 2005 documentary film directed by Micha Peled.[1] It follows the life of Jasmine Li, a seventeen-year-old worker from Sichuan province, in a Chinese jeans factory, Lifeng Clothes Factory (丽锋服饰制衣有限公司) in Shaxi, Guangdong[2] producing Vigaze Jeans (a company based in Istanbul, Turkey[3]), hence the title. Jasmine earned about half a yuan for one hour's work (which amounted to about six US cents).[4]
The documentary discusses the sweatshop conditions in factories in China and China's growing importance as a global exporting country. It's part of Teddy Bear Films' Globalization Trilogy together with Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town, that focuses on consumerism in the U.S., and Bitter Seeds, that looks at the raw materials – the crisis of the farmers in India who are growing the cotton exported to China's garment factories to be used for the clothes sold in the West.
At the 2005 Amnesty International film festival, it won the Amnesty International-DOEN Award. In April 2007, China Blue aired on the award-winning PBS series Independent Lens.
References
- ↑ About Teddy Bear Films
- ↑ Lifeng Clothes Company:
- Lifeng Factory (in English) (archived copy 2003)
- (in English) (archived copy 2007)
- ↑ Vigaze Jeans website Archived May 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ China Blue film - Independent Lens website
External links
- Official website for China Blue
- China Blue webpage for Independent Lens on PBS
- Audio interview of filmmaker Micha Peled with C.S. Soong, host of Against the Grain on KPFA (Pacifica Radio), August 7, 2007
- China Blue at IMDb