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China Blue

Play trailer Poster for China Blue 2005 1h 26m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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100% Tomatometer 16 Reviews 89% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
Guo Xi Lam owns a blue jeans manufacturing plant in the southern Chinese city of Shaxi, known for its large number of clothing factories. This documentary examines the factory's harsh conditions, in which workers are paid as little as 6 cents an hour for shifts that can last up to 20 hours. Here, 15-year-old Jasmine begins working to send money home to her family but quickly grows tired and sick. Meanwhile, Lam proves to be a bad boss, endlessly delaying paying his workers.

Critics Reviews

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Janice Page Boston Globe Though its dissection of globalization is sobering and sharp-tongued in places, the film's approach is ultimately more diary than diatribe, centered on the kind of girls who would rather dance than despair. Rated: 3/4 Mar 8, 2007 Full Review Jeff Shannon Seattle Times Heartbreaking yet boldly essential documentary. Rated: 3.5/4 Jan 26, 2007 Full Review V.A. Musetto New York Post After watching the eye-opening documentary China Blue, you're likely to think twice the next time you want to buy a pair of jeans. At the very least, your conscience will bother you knowing that the garments were made at sweatshops in China. Rated: 3/4 Jan 26, 2007 Full Review David Walsh World Socialist Web Site The film's material is devastating, even if the outlook of the filmmaker is not. Feb 15, 2021 Full Review Beverly Berning culturevulture.net Globalization is here to stay, and it presents us with yet another set of problems that we must address. China Blue does not offer solutions, but it might help get us to stop ignoring the problems. It is the little elephant that roared. Apr 23, 2007 Full Review Barbara Vancheri Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The next time you try on jeans and notice a few stray threads, you won't be so quick to judge the workmanship if you see the documentary China Blue. Rated: 3/4 Apr 20, 2007 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (34) audience reviews
Audience Member Eye-opening doc will make you never buy jeans made in China again. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member Guilty as charged in my Levi's. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Audience Member иР1/2Ñ,еÑесеР1/2 ÑилР1/4 Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member It will definitely make you think twice before buying your next pair of jeans. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/29/23 Full Review Audience Member Normally, I do not watch documentaries at all because they bore the hell out of me. But this one -- China Blue -- WOW! I am particularly excited about this one because it is coming to San Francisco as a sneak preview for the Asian American Film Festival. I am soooo going to be there on Mon, 3/20 for the premiere (even though I have already seen it, totally by chance, when I was vacationing up in Vancouver). Why am I filled with such enthusiasm? For over 20 years, I have been a huge supporter of "made in the USA" products and my friends will call me a stickler to this seemingly small detail. It is extremely important to me to put my hard-earned dollars back into my own country. This documentary encompasses the very reason why. You have to watch this film, which also captures the personal journey of a teenage girl. After seeing the hardships she experiences, I consider myself lucky to be so privileged. I cannot imagine myself in her shoes. You may think it is another sweatshop story, but it is truly touching. There are hints of humor and a touch of drama that I could not have fathomed to be in docs. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Audience Member China Blue directed by Micha Peled A fifteen year old girl leaves home and heads off to work in a jeans factory. This film documents the lack of worker’s rights and the occasionally abysmal working conditions at the factory. Jasmine is just like many young girls who are forced to seek work rather than stay in school. She starts working as a thread cutter and spends sometimes eighteen hours per day prettifying jeans that will be sold all over the world for prices that are often more than one of these girls make in a month. Granted, the cost of living is exceedingly cheap with a cup of tea going for half a yuan (3 c, US) and apparently college costing 3000 yuan, so the misery reports that continue to circulate aren’t entirely accurate. Still, it’s clear that the workers at this particular factory get no money for overtime, do not have sick or pregnancy leave, work insanely long hours and are fined at every turn for the most insignificant infraction. Their lives are consumed with work and they do the same, dull and repetitive task day in and day out. Seven days per week. Some get off better than others. There is one girl who learned to sew zippers and she gets off way earlier than most of the others do. She can go out and hang out with her boyfriend and go to discos. For the others there are no such opportunities as they often work well past midnight and must suffice on three or four hours per sleep per night. Jasmine’s story is most likely typical. Girls are preferred because they are considered easy to manipulate and won’t fight back. In the film the workers do threaten to strike as their wage packets are held back for weeks. The owner, who is facing a shipping deadline that he must meet or risk losing valuable clients, relents and finally pays his employees. The girls return and work until three o clock the next day to complete the order. Clearly very few fashionistas spend even a fleeting thought pondering just where their fancy pair of new jeans originates from. They remain painfully ignorant of the simple fact that a group of young girls have essentially performed slave labor for a wage way below the minimum just so they can fit their bony asses into the latest jeans. And should they care? Does it truly matter where something is made as long as it is made and displayed for hungry consumers who just must have it because it’s for sale? Of course it does but we don’t feel obligated to do anything about it. Everything must be new, immediate, and available. To a Chinese girl, there is a different focus. Jasmine is crestfallen because she cannot afford to go see her parents at New Years. A bus ticket home costs a month’s pay and she’s new so she’s stuck. Wages are most likely insufficient in terms of actual spending money. One girl has enough to pay her debts, pay for room, board and food and has a little left over to send to her parents. That’s it. Working day and night nonstop with no breaks and no chance to do anything fun just so Europeans and Americans can wear designer labels does seem a trifle unbalanced. Fashion seems to require suffering although only a few zealots even seem to be pointing out the nature of the dilemma. Most of us are just dazzled by the feel of new jeans and the lowly existences of poor Chinese girls are bereft of meaning. That’s just the nature of things. There are whistle blowers who are supposed to determine if certain factories are mistreating their workers but the film points out that they never seem to find anything. The film then goes on to state that this is because the owners and managers of the factories train the girls how to lie to make it seem that they are truly happy doing what they do. But who could be happy in such conditions? What kind of pleasure or opportunity for growth can there be in such a situation? Apparently not much although Jasmine has created a super heroine character who flies away from the absolute boredom that afflicts her life. It most likely keeps her sane in an utterly insane situation. Overall, this film shows that all of China’s pretenses toward democracy are not improving the lives of its factory workers. It’s clear that these girls are being exploited because there is nobody who will stand up for them if their conditions become intolerable. They can risk a strike but ultimately it would just cost them their jobs. There is absolutely no protection because unions are outlawed and there is no recourse for grievances. They did manage to get their wage packets weeks late but only because they refused to work. If there wasn’t the tremendous pressure on the factory staff to meet the deadline, perhaps they might not have been so lucky. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Read all reviews
China Blue

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Guo Xi Lam owns a blue jeans manufacturing plant in the southern Chinese city of Shaxi, known for its large number of clothing factories. This documentary examines the factory's harsh conditions, in which workers are paid as little as 6 cents an hour for shifts that can last up to 20 hours. Here, 15-year-old Jasmine begins working to send money home to her family but quickly grows tired and sick. Meanwhile, Lam proves to be a bad boss, endlessly delaying paying his workers.
Director
Micha X. Peled
Producer
Micha X. Peled
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
Chinese
Runtime
1h 26m