Doha Film Institute
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The legal and illegalised inhabitants of Almeria, the biggest vegetable garden in Europe, cooperate to reveal the system of violence behind our tomatoes.
At the far end of Europe, on the southern border of Spain, lies Almería. It is a huge province completely covered with white plastic, harbouring Europe’s largest vegetable garden. It is the place where our tomatoes come from, even in winter. But under all the plastic, strange things happen. Today, Almeria’s freshwater resources are nearly exhausted, pesticides and large quantities of plastic have irreversibly contaminated the soil. Supermarkets yearly decrease the price they are willing to pay for their tomatoes. Vegetable cultivation moves inevitably to Poland and Africa. Spanish farmers dive well under their prices to keep in the race. 120,000 migrants work in slave-like conditions on the plantations. In this film the inhabitants of Almeria work together to reveal how Almerìa grew from an empty desert in the 1950s, into a white, plastic kingdom in the 1980s—and finally into an exhausted wasteland today. With the use of their imagination, we try to find out the blind spots of our capitalist system.

Credits

Director
Moon Blaisse
Screenwriter
Moon Blaisse, Thomas Bellinck
Producer
Emmy Oost, Louis Mataré, David Fonjallaz, Katja Draaijer

About the Director

Moon Blaisse
Moon Blaisse is Dutch, living in Belgium. She is an award-winning director who graduated with a Master in Audiovisual Arts in 2010. Moon was awarded multiple times internationally with her short film ‘Sometime later’ (2011). With the short film ‘Guest’ (2015), she went on to receive the press prize by l’union de la critique de cinéma de Belgique. Moon Blaisse is a Sundance grantee and has also bee
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