"With unsettling visuals, damning examples, and interviews with the leading experts,
The Illusionists reveals the capitalist impulses behind the intimidatingly high standard of beauty in the West and shows how corporations are bringing men, children, and the entire world into its destructive fold. If you're going to watch one documentary on the beauty-industrial complex, this should be it."
- Lisa Wade | Associate Professor of Sociology, Occidental College
"The genius of this piece is in its simplicity. A revelatory primer on the global manipulation of perception and consumption,
The Illusionists should be required viewing in every school – and possibly every home."
- Joss Whedon | Film & TV director, screenwriter and producer (The Avengers, Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
"As modern-day life gets increasingly connected to media and technology, it is vital that we understand how corporate marketers shape images of whom girls and women are and how they need to look. These practices make us need to buy, buy and buy more and more and endlessly try to look right but never quite succeed -- because the images we see are increasingly extreme and unattainable. This film will help women (and men) gain some of the resilience they need to resist the most extreme media messages marketed to them that promote consumer culture and undermine healthy gender development and relationships in these times."
- Diane E. Levin | Professor of Education, Wheelock College
"This important film expands the critique of unattainable beauty to a global scale -- revealing how Western values continue to dominate media and consumer landscapes through neocolonial flows of corporate capital that marginalize entire populations. But perhaps
The Illusionists' best trick will be getting students to wrestle with how ideology functions at the most intimate of levels by preying on their own insecurities."
- Christopher Mark Boulton, PhD | Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of Tampa
"
The Illusionists teases apart complex ideas about power, consumerism and beauty, and leaves the viewer feeling enlightened and ready to make change. A valuable contribution to media literacy and body image education, this is an inspiring documentary with a unique global perspective!"
- Claire Mysko | COO and interim CEO at the National Eating Disorders Association
"
The Illusionists builds upon Jean Kilbourne's pioneering work and offers a brilliant -- and much-needed -- analysis of advertising at a global level. The film's focus on a global culture of ideal beauty exposes the power dynamics inherent in the desire for a Westernized image. And women are no longer the only targets. The film shows how advertising has turned to men for a new market: Fair, hairless skin and a six-pack are the new ideal for masculine desirability. The media literacy that
The Illusionists encourages should be taught along with the basics so that children around the world have a fighting chance against the corporate-inspired conformity of a soul-dead consumer culture."
- Denise H. Sutton, PhD | Author of
Globalizing Ideal Beauty: Women, Advertising, and the Power of Marketing
"
The Illusionists is an important reminder that Western ideals of beauty are increasingly permeating cultures all over the globe, disturbingly making damaging standards of thinness the norm. Rossini's film does much to combat this cross-generation epidemic of body dissatisfaction and should be required viewing for women of all ages."
- Julie Zeilinger | Founder & Editor of The FBomb | Author of
A Little F'd Up: Why Feminism is Not a Dirty Word
"Intriguing and eye-opening"
- Sharon Glynn, LPN | Director of Programming at the Alliance for Eating Disorders Awareness
"This film is a must-see for adolescents and adults alike. It's a wake up call for all of us not only to be mindful of the insidious messages we are fed by media and corporations to sell their products and capitalize on our emotional vulnerabilities, but a call to action to stop the promotion of unrealistic and harmful beauty ideals. The film does a great job of highlighting the issues for boys and men, which is both refreshing and disturbing.
The Illusionists offers hope, too. Just as the media is a channel for negative influences, it can also be harnessed to empower girls and boys, women and men, to revise these persistent and impossible beauty ideals and have constructive conversations around beauty, sex, power, self-worth and self-compassion."
- Tara Cousineau, PhD | Clinical Psychologist | Founder of
BodiMojo.com
"Elena Rossini has made a courageous, well-researched film with
The Illusionists, making a clear link for viewers of how dysfunctional economies and predatory business practices create and reinforce harmful beauty cultures not just in the U.S., but around the world. Fearless in calling out various players in the fashion industry for their racism and use of body shaming to sell products, Rossini wakes us up to what we're actually doing to women and men alike, young women especially, in pursuit of an extremely narrow standard of beauty (white, Western and thin) and sexuality. I hope everyone sees this film, as it challenges all of us to grapple with the colonial, racist and sexist histories upon so many of our world economies are still based, and introduces us to the people who are working to change things for the better. Far from leaving us feeling hopeless, The Illusionists reminds us how as business leaders and consumers, we have power to change what kinds of companies and business practices we support."
- Lex Schroeder | Writer & Director of Strategy & Partnerships at Take The Lead
“I’ve seen
The Illusionists several times now and each day since, no matter where I am or what I’m doing, some part of the film will resonate with me. Whether it is a quote (“We’re losing bodies like we are losing languages”), a statistic (the amount of time we are currently exposed to media and will be exposed to media in the future), or just the simple understanding of the impact that mass media has on every single one of us, no matter how secure we are, I no longer look at advertisements the same. I have a better personal understanding of beauty versus glamour from this film and a better understanding of myself too. To have witnessed the impact that this film had on everyone who saw it was incredibly moving for me. I truly believe that I am a better social work practitioner as a result of the messages in
The Illusionists.”
- Rachael Abrams | Parent Outreach Specialist for Jewish Community Services
“Body image, health, consumer culture and societal and gendered expectations of beauty are all topics that are part of our daily lives. For young college students as well as older adults dealing with aging, I think the film touched a nerve or two with everyone in the audience. I think the impact was to get us thinking about our part in this conversation and what we can be doing for ourselves and our physical and mental well-being.”
- Mahnoor Ahmed | Associate Director, Student Diversity and Development at Towson University
“The film took seven years to complete – seven years – and it shows. Elena produced an inspiring and touching film and introduced topics that I had never before thought about. I’ve seen the film five times and would see it 500 more.”
- Ilana Posner, ifIknew.org
"As someone who is very involved in the conversation around body image after screening the movie, I can honestly state that
The Illusionists is a game changer for opening up the body image conversation up to a world wide audience."
- Brian Cuban | Author of
Shattered Image: My Triumph Over Body Dysmorphic Disorder
"Brava to Rossini for skillfully offering the viewers of
The Illusionists an outside lens from which we can clearly see the intentions and toxic effects of the multi-billion dollar global beauty and advertising industries. As we look in we feel the horror of consumer capitalism as it colonizes our minds and bodies and ruthlessly creates body hatred and insecurity all in the name of profit. We need look no further to understand why there is a mental health epidemic of people unable to comfortably live in their bodies. "
- Luise Eichenbaum | Co-founder of The Women's Therapy Centre Institute, NYC