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For The Greatest Movie Ever Sold, Spurlock whores himself out big-time. To skewer the plague of product placement, he hustles the brands themselves into financing his $1.5 million budget.
Like so many movies, the new documentary by Morgan Spurlock depicts all marketing as just pollution. But that's just bad marketing.
But Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold really only has about 20 minutes of strong material, and he stretches it out to 90 minutes with plenty of smug asides about the absurdity ...
1. Morgan Spurlock's "The Greatest Movie Ever Sold" -- it's officially called "POM Wonderful Presents The Greatest Movie Ever Sold," but I'm going to ignore that for the same reason I don't call ...
The two most expensive movie cars ever sold were both used in a film depicting a fictionalized version of the 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race in France. This Ford Gulf GT40 was used primarily as a ...
Your enjoyment of The Greatest Movie Ever Sold will be less dependent on your take on Spurlock the director, but rather Spurlock the personality.
Surely the only documentary ever brought to you by pomegranate juice, Morgan Spurlock’s “ POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold ” is a consistently amusing and not entirely ...
The Greatest Movie Ever Sold is the greatest movie lie ever told. Documentary filmmaker Morgan Spurlock starts this movie out telling us it will be about product placement in films and that to make… ...
The result is “POM Wonderful Presents the Greatest Movie Ever Sold,” a film about product placement that takes the form of a search for product placement partners for a film about product ...
By Walter Addiego, Chronicle Staff WriterApril 21, 2011 Left to Right: Morgan Spurlock (Director) and Quentin Tarantino (filmmaker) in, "The Greatest Movie Ever Sold."Daniel Marracino/Sony ...
More than a movie about making a movie, Pom Wonderful Presents The Greatest Movie Ever Sold is also an absorbing look at how advertisements affect our culture.
Sundance Review: “The Greatest Movie Ever Sold” This obsessive search for sponsorship might be the funniest doc ever.