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    Friday, January 25, 2008
    A big prize for "Sleep Dealer"
    PARK CITY -- One Sundance award winner is already out of the bag: Alex Rivera's futuristic tale "Sleep Dealer" has received the Alfred P. Sloan Prize.

    The award goes to a movie with a scientific or technological theme, or depicts a scientist, engineer or mathematician as a major character. It's presented by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

    The best part for the winner: A $20,000 cash prize. (At the Awards Night ceremony for a previous festival, actress-writer Guinevere Turner presented this award, commenting to the assembled filmmakers, "Dude, stick a robot in your movie - this is $20,000!")

    "Sleep Dealer" is set in a future society where migrant Mexican workers do "virtual labor" in bordertown factories, plugged into machines that control robots in the United States - importing the labor without importing the workers.

    -- Sean P. Means

    1 Comments:

    At 11:42 AM , OpenID janus9 said...

    "Sleep Dealer" deserves praise. There are several important themes running through the movie. Some of these (water rights, exploitation of alien workers, misuse of the military) could be - and are- the subject matter for their own movies. However, the film makes its own statement about human values, against the backdrop of these ideas. Its message is transcendent.

     

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