
Documentary that explores mankind's desire to be famous and its effect on society.... (Full plot summary below)
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Documentary that explores mankind's desire to be famous and its effect on society.
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| Sight and SoundIsabel StevensThe public are either sneered at or cast as victims, and throughout the psyche of the celeb-addict remains elusive. |
| Film4Jon FortgangThis provocative, proudly partisan but consistently entertaining doc is compulsory viewing not just for everyone working within the media, but for anyone who watches TV, reads the papers, surfs the net or has to walk down a city street. |
| ScotsmanAlistair HarknessIt's sobering stuff that refuses to let anyone off the hook. |
| Metro (UK)Anna SmithIt's all quite entertaining but doesn't really tell us anything new. |
| ViewLondonMatthew TurnerAn entertaining, thought-provoking and necessary attack on today's celebrity-obsessed media. |
| Daily Mail (UK)Christopher TookeyA more chaotic mixture of good and bad. Its faults include a tiresomely hectoring narrator and an approach that tries to cram far too many disparate thoughts into 100 minutes. |
| Daily Telegraph (UK)Tim RobeyA lot of valid points are scored in passing against the celebrity-industrial complex, but there's not enough real news here. |
| GuardianPeter BradshawKnocking celeb culture might be like shooting fish in a barrel, but documentary activist Chris Atkins gets a pretty loud bang. |
| Time OutDave CalhounAtkins is keener to bring comedy to the subject with a series of stunts that make for amusing if hardly revelatory watching |
| Observer (UK)Philip FrenchThis lively, ludic documentary about fame, celebrity and the mass media is an entertaining mess. |