Inequality for All
The documentary discusses USA's widening economic situation with the present of former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich.
4 August 1961, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
21 February 1946, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
31 May 1943, Los Angeles, California, USA
8 June 1925, New York City, New York, USA
17 January 1964, Chicago, Illinois, USA
2 September 1931, Denver, Colorado, USA
18 April 1963, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
1 September 1939, Detroit, Michigan, USA
9 May 1946, Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA
28 November 1962, New York City, New York, USA
January 19, 2014
Former Clinton Cabinet member Robert Reich makes his case for a kindler, gentler capitalism.
October 31, 2013
Inequality for All is intelligent, persuasive and accessible, a gentle but urgent clarion call to action.
September 27, 2013
That a documentary about economics could be so personally emotional and affecting is remarkable. And to learn from Reich in this film, as his students at Berkeley do, is a treat and a privilege.
December 12, 2013
Documentaries about the economy being what they are, you might not expect much from Inequality For All, but as directed by Jacob Kornbluth, it is the Indianapolis 500 of wealth analyses.
July 30, 2015
Engaging economics docu encourages equality, activism.
November 01, 2013
Reich is a natural teacher of complex concepts: The film doesn't feel like homework.
October 04, 2013
Overall, this film is enlightening, entertaining and seriously alarming.
May 30, 2014
A levelheaded, easily understandable primer on the aspects and causes of the problem. However, it does not do much to distinguish itself from similar documentaries.
October 24, 2013
Topical documentaries mostly appeal to the converted and are ignored by those who disagree. And "Inequality" probably will be no exception.
October 03, 2013
President Clinton's secretary of labor lectures on income inequality with a refreshing lack of jargon.
December 05, 2013
America is a country without any "self-admitted proletarians," where even the poorest see themselves as "temporarily embarrassed" millionaires.
October 03, 2013
This documentary would be a rousing David and Goliath story even if its hero weren't the diminutive Robert B. Reich.

