An award-winning film on environmental tragedy, We All Live Downstream follows a Greenpeace team who sailed down the 2,300 mile long Mississippi River and found toxic tales aplenty. The problems begin almost at the fountainhead--in Minnesota's Twin Cities, concerned citizens and employees from the aptly named Pig's Eye Sewage Treatment Plant argue about the whether the plant does more harm than good, while further downstream (off the Tennessee, by way of the Ohio, by way of the Mississippi) Jim Champion ("My political leanings are to the right of Attila the Hun") joins arms with Culvert City, KY liberals to protest chemical plant pollution which has generated an alarming cancer rate in the area. Perhaps the most flagrant example on the program is that of the town of Revelletown
We All Live Downstream
(1990) 30 m. $39.95. The Video Project. Public performance rights included. Vol. 6, Issue 8
We All Live Downstream
Star Ratings
As of March 2022, Video Librarian has changed from a four-star rating system to a five-star one. This change allows our reviewers to have a wider range of critical viewpoints, as well as to synchronize with Google’s rating structure. This change affects all reviews from March 2022 onwards. All reviews from before this period will still retain their original rating. Future film submissions will be considered our new 1-5 star criteria.
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