The Fight of Our Lives: Defeating the Ideological War Against the West

The Fight of Our Lives: Defeating the Ideological War Against the West

By Gloria Z. Greenfield

  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release Date: 2019-02-02
  • Advisory Rating: Unrated
  • Runtime: 1h 6min
  • Director: Gloria Z. Greenfield
  • iTunes Price: USD 7.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
10/10
10
From 1 Ratings

Description

In this hard-hitting documentary, the world-class cast of experts present a powerful argument that we in the West are facing a lethal threat to our way of life—to our Western culture and tradition. Whether we acknowledge it or not, we are in the fight of our lives against the greatest challenge of our time. Harvard's Niall Ferguson sets the stage with the admonition that great civilizations have disappeared more quickly than those living at the time ever anticipated. British author/journalist Melanie Phillips provides the film's organizational framework, noting that the West faces an existential threat both "from within" and "from without." Using the "narration without a narrator" technique, Greenfield skillfully weaves commentary about this complex subject into a cogent argument. The Fight of Our Lives should convince you that action is necessary to defeat this clear and present danger. If we don't renew our moral confidence in our heritage, we will lose the fight.

Trailer

Reviews

  • Cogent, succinct, and chilling

    5
    By anglowoman
    You can’t afford NOT to watch this. Now, more than ever.
  • A profound film; watch it more than once

    5
    By Person PMW
    This is a stunning documentary – striking in its excellent filmmaking and storytelling; exquisite in the superb roster of commentators; shocking in the threats it exposes and explains; and remarkable in the way these threats are woven together into a thorough and unmistakable chronicle. Insight awaits both the novice and expert in the explorations of identity politics, honor killing, democracy, free speech, safe spaces and educational institutions. This is a profound film that can and should be viewed more than once, by young and old, and shared with friends and colleagues.

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