The Culture High

The Culture High

2014 ""
The Culture High
The Culture High

The Culture High

8.2 | 2h0m | en | Documentary

The Culture High tears into the very fibre of the modern day marijuana debate to reveal the truth behind the arguments and motives governing both those who support and oppose the existing pot laws.

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8.2 | 2h0m | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: September. 18,2014 | Released Producted By: , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

The Culture High tears into the very fibre of the modern day marijuana debate to reveal the truth behind the arguments and motives governing both those who support and oppose the existing pot laws.

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Brett Harvey

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Andrew Yniguez "The Culture High" is a documentary that was released on October 17, 2014. It is directed by Brett Harvy and stars several different people and professionals in the subject of cannabis. This documentary find itself trying to tackle the big issue of cannabis in the present day world, being heavily focused on whether or not it should be legal and how dangerous it is compared to other substances such as alcohol and prescription drugs. The film immediately starts off with a SWAT team breaking into a house that they believe is involved in the distribution on marijuana due to them finding traces of it in the household's garbage. This scene is a very strong statement for the movie to start off with. From here the movie starts taking on all the big questions about marijuana and all the misconceptions that the public is lead to believe. The film is strongly focused on distributing the real facts about cannabis and what it can really do for the public.This film is most interesting when it points out all of the flaws in prescription drugs and how they can be plenty more harmful than marijuana can be. People believe that since prescription drugs are legal they couldn't possibly be harmful but in a large amount of cases they can be severely harmful. The film states that some of these prescription drugs can easily be replaced by cannabis which would have severely less side effects. There is also a strong argument about how marijuana use should not result in being put in jail or anything along those lines. The film starts talking about how several recent presidents have openly confessed that they used marijuana when they were younger and do not wish others to fall into the path that they did. At this point it is argued that if they were caught with marijuana when they were younger than they would have never won the presidency due to the fact that they had that criminal record, so it is brought up to think about whether this should be punishable to the extent that it is.When "The Culture High" isn't talking about the usefulness of cannabis and how much it can help people in need, it finds itself attacking all of the other substances that are used by the general public due to it being legal. Much time is spent bad mouthing alcohol and prescription drugs for all of the things that they can lead to. The film says that doctors become influenced by the distributors of different prescription drugs which can take away from their honest opinion about what their patient should use to help with their illness. There is also the argument on how many deaths alcohol has led to from intoxication and alcohol poisoning. These arguments are valid but they can take away from the overall picture that this film is trying to make about cannabis.According to critic Geoff Berkshire of Variety, "the film leaps from topic to topic like a particularly ADD member of the debate club." Although I do agree with Berkshire in that the film does seem to not be as focused, but it does bring up many valid points in the debate for legalizing marijuana. Berkshire also talks about how the credibility of the speakers in the film can vary. For example Berkshire states that "the scores of talking heads range from insightful (former Baltimore police detective and "The Wire" co-creator Ed Burns) to kooky (author Howard Bloom) to totally far out (charming former international pot smuggler Howard Marks)." I agree with him in the respect that some of the speakers in the film can seem unnecessary at times. Although these points can be distracting at times, I still feel that "The Culture High" has a strong case for the many uses of marijuana if it were to be legalized. Overall, I would recommend this film to any people that are on the fence about the legalization of marijuana. I would not trust the views of all of the people in this documentary due to the fact that some are not as credible as others are in this particular field. I would recommend that you have some general knowledge about cannabis before watching this movie. Anyone who is interested in marijuana and its possibilities to help people should watch "The Culture High". It is a very informative film with strong evidence to support its claims and many interesting ideas to think about after it is over.
e-earnest I think it is sad to have to say this to validate my opinion, but I will say right up front that I do not smoke marijuana. Despite that, I believe it is CRITICAL for every thinking American to watch this film. It is an excellent expose of our current drug policies, criminal system, medical system, pharmaceutical system, legal system and last but certainly not least it lays open our political system. Please watch it, please share it. Knowledge is power. Overlook the characters and strong language and listen to what is being said. It is important information that needs to be disseminated throughout our country and it's people. This documentary is successful in in showing the hypocrisy and illogicality of our nations drug policies and specifically the prohibition of cannabis (marijuana). Take off your blinders and expand beyond your current mindset and allow yourself to listen, this film may just enlighten you to think a little differently. Don't be afraid to open yourself to information that may be contrary to what you've been led to believe, because you have been led. Think for yourself and make up your own mind.
srolesen The Netflix description of this documentary claims it presents an unbiased view on marijuana legislation. The reason i came here to review it was the fact that it's massively biased towards legal pot, and that at least half their arguments are simply nonsensical propaganda.This documentary presents so many flawed arguments in favor of legal pot, by people that come off as ... damaged (by drugs?) that it ends up being one big argument against legal pot. Witch is sad, I think legislation is a good idea, and an unbiased documentary would be very much worth a watch, but this trite zeitgeist knockoff is entertainment for morons and druggies.Not worth your time, skip it
Rodrigo Andrés Vargas Usach I enjoyed the documentary and liked how they managed to expand their topic from marijuana to a lot of the issues or society is facing nowadays, revealing shocking facts, some of which I ignored. I think it does a great job at informing people about the current state of the legalization debate and what social issues are in some way connected to it, how there has been a lot of manipulation, how it happened and how it continues to occur, after watching the documentary you realize that you didn't just watch a documentary about pot, that was just the starting point and it is just a example. When I finished watching the documentary, I did what I usually do after watching a movie, opened IMDb, voted and checked out what other people had to say about it (my major is psychology and my minor is cinematography and took some documentary classes at the university). I was instantly amazed by the huge difference between user score and the metascore, so I continued to read some of the metacritic reviews and I was surprised by how unfounded and fallacy-based all the criticism was (reading some of the reviews I felt like they didn't even watch the full documentary or they were people with poor understanding of the subjects - cinematography, documentary and/or the topics discussed on the documentary). Personally I rated the documentary with a 9, because I liked how they exposed their ideas in a fun and simple way, keeping it close to the public, sometimes laughing at a joke and other times feeling the pain and emotion from a heartbreaking story. Also I liked the footage they used, the only aspect I didn't like was it's length (I found it to be a little too long, extending too much on some topics) and that it was centered on the United States scenario (which I totally understand).My personal conclusion was that those reviews are only more proof to what the documentary trying to point out.Thank you for reading and please excuse my grammar since I am not a native English speaker.