Grass

1999
7.2| 1h20m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 15 September 1999 Released
Producted By: Sphinx Productions
Country: Canada
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://www.sphinxproductions.com/films/grass/
Info

Marijuana is the most controversial drug of the 20th Century. Smoked by generations to little discernible ill effect, it continues to be reviled by many governments on Earth. In this Genie Award-winning documentary veteran Canadian director Ron Mann and narrator Woody Harrelson mix humour and historical footage together to recount how the United States has demonized a relatively harmless drug.

Genre

Documentary

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Grass (1999) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Ron Mann

Production Companies

Sphinx Productions

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Grass Audience Reviews

AniInterview Sorry, this movie sucks
UnowPriceless hyped garbage
Adeel Hail Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.
Allison Davies The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
Claudia King (agentclaudia) I watched this right after completing a research paper on marijuana policy, and it was certainly a nice break after working entirely out of dry text. Much easier on the eyes than hundreds of pages of tiny type.There certainly is a lot of stuff this movie left out, including some of the funnier things (such as the marijuana murder trials of 1938, or the 120-second Congressional hearings for the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act), but it definitely gets the point across in a colorful, often rather silly way complete with movie clips, weird songs, goofy video-game graphics, old-ranting-politician footage, and some of the more ludicrous public service announcements. The cultural bent makes it much less dry than most of the strictly historical, legal and political reading I've done, which is saying a bit as the legal history is pretty entertaining.Just in case you somehow miss the point (or forget about it while watching Cab Calloway tap-dance), Grass makes a heavy point of repeatedly pointing out the escalating amounts of money spent on this unobtrusive little weed, and highlights the blatant lies the public has been subjected to over the past century by reiterating "The Truth" for every decade or so.The only real downside to the movie is that it skipped over the disclaimer that every marijuana decriminalization piece really needs to have in it somewhere: There is no such thing as an entirely safe drug.In conclusion, I would recommend this movie quite highly if you're looking to be introduced to the subject in a tolerably entertaining fashion, or if you're sick of reading and want something a little more audially/visually stimulating. For real information on the drug, however, I'd recommend reading "Marihuana: a Signal of Misunderstanding" instead.
roospam this movie is well worth seeing whether you are for or against legalization.i never heard about this movie, was it even in the theaters? unlike most documentary movies this was is well put together and it was entertaining to watch.if you read a lot of the books out there that explore hemp legalization you will find that they concur with a lot of the points raised in this movie.i found that this movie did not do enough to discuss some of hemps medicinal advantages. also this movie did not discuss it's use as an alternative biomass fuel.it's good to educate yourself and question whether we have been hearing the real truth over the years. check out the emporer wears no clothes. you can probably find a copy at amazon.com. that books discusses in great depth some benefits to legalizing hemp.
bob the moo The story of the US Government's war on marijuana over 100 years showing key figures, events and periods in the war. This is a genuinely fascinating documentary that looks at the century broken down into periods of several years or several decades. The periods are mainly connected by the `official truth' of the drug that the US put out to try and put off users.The film is fascinating not in the way it looks at the drug but at the look at the war - in fact it has nothing about grass that shows it's safe or anything to convince us that it should be legal. Rather the film looks at the tactics used to fight the war - mostly it's media spin, with the head of the FDN (now DEA) at one time having power over the content of all films shown in the US that mention the drug - anything that didn't put a negative spin on it were banned. The story down the years is captivating, and the money spent is astounding.However the film has a major weakness. As I said it doesn't try to make any points about the drug - there's nothing to convince a fence sitter that the drug is good or that it should be legalised. However it's obvious that the director is pro-grass and he makes his point by having a very light hearted tone to the film. At first this is refreshing as it makes it feel very relaxed and less historical and dusty. However this tone continues as the director basically makes fun of everyone who fought the drug - he does this by using outtakes of detractors rather than just the interviews etc. TV reporters are shown making mistakes, Nixon is shown preparing for a TV statement - basically the film doesn't try to make any points in defence of the drug but rather just tries to make any detractors look stupid.The final line from Mayor La Guardia (actually referring to Prohibition) is a great touch and gets the message across but the lazy bias that runs throughout takes a lot away from the film.
alrupert I find reviews interesting in that they tell us what the "reviewer" got out of the movie. I will try to give a true review, and I believe a true "review" tells what point the movie was making. Of course this would be what I got out of the movie, so is it a true review. Maybe the only way for a person to really know what a movie is about is to watch it and not worry about what someone else thought of it. I think this movie was written as a "documentary" and it documents the propaganda about drug from the beginning of the century. It attempts to show those of us who have seen the current propaganda our how it has been presented over the generations. I saw the point as being how serious the subject is taken now, and how we are told that the current law is based on the facts, when their facts came from a propaganda campaign. And if you look deep enough you will see that that propaganda campaign was perpetrated for the interest of Big Business. The purpose of the "war against marijuana" is not to eliminate the use. It is to prevent the growth of hemp which competes with the cotton industry, petroleum industry, paper industry, etc. It is also interesting that we continue to let the propaganda confuse the marijuana plant with the hemp plant.