Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

The filmmaker skewering the West’s obsession with money

Generation Wealth — For years, Lauren Greenfield has been using film and photography to shine an unforgiving light on the super-rich, exposing toxic worlds where ‘bling, celebrity, and narcissism’ reign supreme.

Lauren Greenfield understands the power of privilege. The Boston-born, Harvard educated daughter of two Harvard graduates is one of contemporary photography’s most in-demand talents.

For the past quarter of a century, Greenfield has been meticulously documenting the lives of the super-rich – and those who aspire to be so. Her vivid images of plastic-surgery-hungry single mothers, disgraced bankers, strip club owners, the stoic wives of oligarchs, Icelandic fishermen, and pre-fame, pre-teen future reality TV behemoths are snapshots of a society teetering into fiscal and personal oblivion. Welcome to what Greenfield’s taken to calling Generation Wealth.

If 2017’s Phaidon-released Generation Wealth was a partial summation of Greenfield’s concern with what she tells me represents a “sea change in culture,” this year’s film of the same name sees the documentarian delving even deeper into the dark. It explores the recesses of an image-obsessed and troublingly aspirational collective psyche that’s almost indivisible from life lived in the golden hamster wheel of late-stage capitalism. Out here, in the rubble of the post-crash landscape, Greenfield says, we can see “the destruction and degradation of the shared values that used to hold us together.”

Those values, a set of previously ingrained morals that we might, if we were so inclined, describe as “the American dream,” are central to Greenfield’s work as a whole. Her previous documentary, 2012’s The Queen of Versaille, saw the photographer follow property magnate David Siegel and his socialite-cum-computer engineer wife Jackie in their quest to construct the largest single-family detached house in America. It is, in many ways, a film about the way reality and fantasy barely mingle, let alone fuse. By the end of the film, 2008’s recession has hit, construction is halted, pets are neglected, and staff find themselves out of work. The dream is over.

What we’ve seen, Greenfield argues, is a switch from “valuing hard work and frugality and discipline,” into sliding headfirst into a version of reality in which “bling, celebrity, and narcissism” reign supreme.

“The media is a big part of that change,” she says. “In the past 25 years people have started spending more time with the people they know on television rather than with their actual neighbours. They started to want what they saw on television rather than what they wanted in real life.” Suddenly, Americans no longer felt the need to keep up with the Joneses – now they had to keep up with the Kardashians.

Generation Wealth - Still 1

Describing her analytical approach to photography as being “a little like practising psychiatry without a license,” Greenfield probes deep into what drives her subjects and how, ultimately, it all reverts back to the cold, hard, inescapable reality of money. And seen through Greenfield’s lens, money is an addiction.

Florian Homm, a sockless figure in loafers, is one of the project’s most memorable characters. Hollow-cheeked, wild-eyed, he is an addict. A cigar-chomping cypher of Gordon Gekko’s “greed is good” mantra, Homm alternates between boldly proclaiming his love for money itself, to contritely running through the oldest myth in capitalism: all the money in the world can’t buy you love.

A former investment banker now seeking refuge from the FBI in Germany, Homm is the “quintessential projection” of the fiscal addict, the banker with a “golden number” in his head, a figure that’ll be reached and realised and relinquished.

Generation Wealth - Still 3

“They get to the number and they want more and then there’s another number,” Greenfield says, equating it to the eating disorders that she’s documented through the years. “Money is a stand-in for something more than you have, and being someone other than you are. The addiction is a common one because it is very prevalent in our culture to think we can get all the things we want from money. And then we find out that, because none of that is really about money, that money itself can never satisfy any yearning.”

That sensation of an illusory kind of hole-filling, with money always being seen as some sort of salve, is elucidated best by Lil Magic, the owner of Magic City, the famous Atlanta strip club. The money, he says, as we watch chain-draped rappers throw thick wads of dollar bills at dancers, is an irrelevance. In strip clubs and shopping malls, operating theatres and sports car dealerships all that matters is the face. “You just fake it,” he says, dolefully, “till you make it.”

In Lil Magic’s world, and ours too, the image is as real as reality itself. We have swallowed postmodernism and its disruptions and discontents wholesale – we are trapped in the hall of mirrors.

Generation Wealth - Still 5

Greenfield’s breakthrough was 1997’s Fast Forward: Growing Up in the Shadow of Hollywood, an intimate, revealing look at the lives of LA’s wealthy and well-manicured high schoolers, children brandishing hundred dollar bills and luxury watches. It is the beginning of a narrative that, as everything seems to in the now, ends with the election of Donald Trump, a man who Greenfield calls “the apotheosis of Generation Wealth.”

Trump, with his skyscrapers built on mountains of debt, his 24K gold penthouse, and his propensity for grandiosity is, she says, “a symptom of all we see in Generation Wealth. We can only look to ourselves to fix it. There is a deep, deep cultural problem, and it’s like Lil Magic says: we don’t know the difference between reality and entertainment anymore.”

Generation Wealth is at turns gaudily entertaining – a maximal, hyperreal version of peering into suburbia’s net curtains on a winter evening’s walk – and deeply troubling. A shrewd critique of capitalism’s ultimate failure, it offers no alternatives, because how can it? What we see is a set of broken people, lives marred by what money has done to all of us. They have grabbed and aspired, reached and failed. They have traded, on some fundamental level, their very being for the promises money makes. Money has betrayed them. Watching the film, we begin to recognise ourselves – and this is probably the most troubling thing of all.

Generation Wealth is currently showing at Sundance London.

Follow Josh Baines on Twitter.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.


You might like

Culture

A luminous portrait of Black life over six decades

Shared Memories — As staff photographer for The New York Times, Chester Higgins captured Black culture and spiritual connection like no other. A new exhibition celebrates his life and impact.

Written by: Miss Rosen

© Beverly Price
Culture

In photos: Washington DC’s Black communities facing up to gentrification

A Language We Share — A new exhibition featuring the work of Beverly Price and Gordon Parks preserves historically Black neighbourhoods in the USA, before development and economic forces made them disappear.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Sport

A portrait of the UK’s oldest boxing club

Learning the Ropes — A new documentary by Ryan Pickard chronicles the hard-edged history of Repton Boxing Club in Bethnal Green, while asking poignant questions about the present and future of the sport in the UK.

Written by: Sydney Lobe

Music

New film spotlights London’s Bubble Club, the party by people with learning disabilities

Radically inclusive clubbing — Produced by Muddled Marauders and currently fundraising for completion, the feature documentary focuses on the inclusive night, which has been in operation since 2005.

Written by: Roxana Diba

Sophie Green
Culture

Sophie Green’s maximalist, technicolour vision of Britain’s fringes

Tangerine Dreams — The photographer has spent over a decade documenting the rituals, subcultures and social gatherings that form the collaged fabric of the UK’s society. A new exhibition at the Martin Parr Foundation celebrates her work and the communities she captures.

Written by: Roxana Diba

© Tahnei Roy
Music

Jack Johnson’s third act

SURFILMUSIC — Three decades on from his trajectory-altering crash at Pipeline and subsequent music career, the singer-songwriter looks back at his life and work in a new, expansive film.

Written by: D’Arcy Doran

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.