Orlando Sentinel

Exploring our obsession with money, acquisitio­n

- By Michael O’Sullivan

Photograph­er and filmmaker Lauren Greenfield has made a career out of documentin­g the culture of conspicuou­s consumptio­n and the commodific­ation of all things — including the human body. In her 2006 feature documentar­y debut, “Thin,” about women with eating disorders, and the 2012 “The Queen of Versailles,” about a wealthy couple’s attempt to build a house in Florida modeled after the French royal palace, Greenfield has turned her camera on an America obsessed with the superficia­l.

It’s an obsession that has fascinated her for 25 years, ever since Greenfield found the first expression of her artistic voice in photograph­s of teenagers in Los Angeles, a project that would go on to become the acclaimed and disturbing 1997 book “Fast Forward: Growing Up in the Shadow of Hollywood.”

Greenfield’s latest documentar­y, “Generation Wealth,” is both a continuati­on of that obsession and a reflection upon it. In a sense, the film is a kind of double portrait, one in which the Los Angelesbre­d artist and armchair anthropolo­gist sees herself reflected in the mirror of her work, along with her self-regarding subjects.

Of the world of privilege and perverse values that she has come to examine so closely — in books, exhibition­s and films that dissect unfettered capitalism and the craving for more — she describes herself as both “critic and participan­t.”

What’s missing from this self-examinatio­n is perspectiv­e.

Although “Generation Wealth” features Greenfield’s first-person narration, as well as interviews with her psychologi­st mother, Patricia Marks Greenfield, and homemovie-style footage of Greenfield with her sons and husband, the insights into Greenfield’s own psyche feel more scant and superficia­l than those she gleans from others. Meaty interviews with journalist Chris Hedges, for instance, lend the film needed context and a sense of intellectu­al detachment.

In one segment, Hedges opines that modern society’s lack of upward mobility — its class inelastici­ty — has made the outward appearance of wealth matter disproport­ionately more than ever. We desire $700 shoes, gilded bling and other trappings of the “haves” because we want to disguise the fact that we are the have-nots.

Needless to say, Donald Trump appears in the film, if only in passing, about a half-hour in, when the businessma­n turned president’s role as an avatar of the American Dream — a self-made mogul, or so he would have us believe — is held up as an explanatio­n of his political ascendancy. We voted for him, in other words, because we want to be him or at least to believe the version of him we saw on “The Apprentice.”

(“Generation Wealth” is distribute­d by Amazon Studios. Amazon Chief Executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Interviews with the subjects, now 40-ish, of “Fast Forward,” paired with shots from the book of their former, less introspect­ive adolescent selves, also add useful substance and poignant wisdom.

Florian Homm, the wealthy German former hedge fund manager who went on the lam in 2007 after being charged with investment fraud by the U.S. government, appears in interviews too. Homm comes across as unchastene­d, but at least more cautious about the empty promises of the prosperity gospel. “If you think that money will buy you anything and everything,” he says, “you’ve never, ever had money.”

If “Generation Wealth” has a message that empty acquisitiv­eness is bad, it delivers it, like the rest of her work, by showing, not telling.

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