62m; U.S.
Director: Loretta Alper & Pepi Leistyna
Synopsis: How TV views the working class; Ed Asner narrates. A tad pedantic but well-done look at how the working class has been portrayed on television.
62m; U.S.
Director: Loretta Alper & Pepi Leistyna
Synopsis: How TV views the working class; Ed Asner narrates. A tad pedantic but well-done look at how the working class has been portrayed on television.
128m; France
Director: Laurent Cantent
Synopsis: Teacher and novelist François Bégaudeau plays a version of himself as he negotiates a year with his racially mixed students from a tough Parisian neighborhood.
4m; U.K.
Director: Chris Kasrils
Synopsis: Living wage fight of rail and tube cleaners in UK
92m; U.S.
Director: Kevin Smith
Cast: Brian O’Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Marilyn Ghigliotti
Synopsis (IMDB): A day in the lives of two convenience clerks named Dante and Randal as they annoy customers, discuss movies, and play hockey on the store roof.
96m; U.S.
Director: Jill Sprecher
Cast: Parker Posey, Lisa Kudrow, Toni Collette and Alanna Ubach
Synopsis: Four temporary office workers; shy Iris, brash Margaret, wannabe starlet Paula and pampered Jane become fast friends while temping at a big company where looking busy is a full time occupation. But when their boss hires a new assistant, their jobs — and their friendship — are suddenly in danger.
93m; Czechoslovakia
Director: Jirí Menzel
Cast: Václav Neckár, Josef Somr and Vlastimil Brodský
Synopsis: An apprentice train dispatcher at a village station seeks his first sexual encounter and becomes despondent when he is unable to perform.
U.S.
Director: Thom Beers
Synopsis: By AARON BARNHART, The Kansas City Star In the opening minutes of “Coal,” the latest drama about dangerous jobs from reality TV king Thom Beers, we follow the guys on the day shift as they head into the Westchester coal mine in southern West Virginia. For a few moments the music and voices fade away, and all you hear is the sound of the motorized transport. You’re one with the men, riding flat on your back in the rear of the sled, the ceiling racing by just a couple of inches above your head. When the transports arrive at the work area, everything goes quiet, and you survey the endless rows of crawl space where these men will spend the next nine hours. It’s a scene designed to show just how dark and treacherous it is way down in the mines, though anyone who saw Barbara Kopple’s classic 1976 documentary “Harlan County, U.S.A.” already knows that. But while Kopple made a brave film about mine workers fighting for a better life and future for their families, “Coal” is a formulaic, context-free hour about hazardous duty that shuttles the viewer brilliantly from one adrenaline rush to the next. In an interview last fall, Beers said he’d spent three years looking for a coal mine to film. He wanted to focus on a “family business,” he told me, one that was “barely making a living,” like the king crab fisherman of “Deadliest Catch” who he has made into TV stars. Beers found Tom Roberts, a 46-year veteran of the industry, who was hired in early 2010 by Cobalt Coal to restart the Westchester site. “I’ve blown a couple of fortunes in coal,” Roberts says on the show, but that’s misleading because his money isn’t on the line here. In fact, he’s on salary and got a signing bonus of 500,000 shares of stock, according to the website of Cobalt, which is owned by a Canadian energy concern. Cobalt hired Roberts to hire workers and coax 40 loads of coal out of them, every shift, twice a day. That is the drama “Coal” lasers in on. One of the show’s stars is Andy Christian, who runs the continuous miner, a fearsome-looking machine that uses a rotating drum with huge teeth to scrape the coalbed. Christian, says Beers (in his familiar role as narrator), “is the best miner in West Virginia.” A noble-looking soul with soft eyes and a voice that’s barely there, Christian spends the day working a joystick, controlling the beast, making sure it keeps churning out the coal without weakening the roof over the workers’ heads. “He just got the touch,” a co-worker says. Randy Remines, Christian’s counterpart on the night shift, isn’t so gifted with the controls. What’s more, his wife didn’t want him going back underground. “I’ve had three heart attacks,” Remines explains before heading down to do battle, a losing one mostly, with the machine. Men’s lives and livelihoods are on the line, which makes “Coal” a perfect fit for Spike, the cable channel well-known for its ultimate fighting bouts. But “Coal” is so focused on the daily operations at the Westchester mine that it ignores the larger drama facing the area around it, devastated by 150 years of coal mining. McDowell County has seen its population decline from 100,000 in the roaring 1950s, when metallurgical coal production was at its peak, to less than 30,000 today. It has the highest poverty level of any county in West Virginia, and its schools were so decrepit in 2001 that the state took them over. “One of the most busted up, down and out regions of West Virginia,” is how Jeff Goodell, author of “Big Coal” and “How to Cool the Planet,” describes it. And that’s despite the fact that prices for metallurgical coal are skyrocketing (it’s used in steelmaking). Production in the state actually fell 1.3 percent last year. The reserves easiest to extract are long gone. In McDowell County these days, most coal operators don’t even try to dig under mountains. They just blow the tops off. I don’t want to diminish the risks the men take every day they ride down into those mines. They, and their loved ones, will watch this slickly produced show with justifiable pride. But the history of exploitation in this region runs up to the present day, as evidenced by the Upper Big Branch disaster, just an hour’s drive away from Westchester, where 29 miners lost their lives one year ago in a massive methane blast. That site had committed hundreds of safety violations and was run for decades by a ruthless CEO who finally stepped down in December after Goodell exposed his abusive practices in Rolling Stone. Goodell suspects that Cobalt is using “Coal” to promote its investment in Westchester and help its stock price. I suspect he’s right, and unless Andy Christian and his buddies are getting some Cobalt stock for their troubles, that stinks. If “Coal” won’t give you the lay of the land, do yourself a favor and download or rent “Harlan County U.S.A.” That film, which won an Oscar, centered on a nearly yearlong strike in 1973 and 1974 by workers seeking representation from the United Mine Workers. Duke Power sent in thugs, scabs and state troopers to try to break the strike. But the workers prevailed, thanks to their wives — who played a major role in the demonstrations — and a ragtag film crew from New York.
27m; U.S.
Director: Tom Hansell
Synopsis: In the spirit of Dancing Outlaw, Tom Hansell explores the world of overweight coal-hauling trucks in eastern Kentucky. The U.S. Department of Energy reports that coal produces over half of our nation’s electricity. This film is built around a day in the life of a Kentucky coal truck driver. This digital documentary gives Americans a direct look at where our energy comes from, and reveals the human and environmental price we pay for our national addiction to fossil fuels. The narrative line follows two Kentucky coal truck drivers as they chase their version of the American dream. Viewers learn how the economics of the coal business demand that both drivers break the law every day. A veteran independent trucker plays the “cops and robbers” game with the weight crew from the Department of Transportation. A young driver debates whether to keep hauling coal or to move his family to the city. In addition, a father describes a collision with a coal truck that killed his teenage son. Facts and figures about coal as an energy source will place these individual struggles in a national context. Coal Bucket Outlaw examines the connection between coal haulers and the larger system that produces America’s electricity. If outlaws deliver half of our nation’s energy, are consumers and policymakers completely innocent?
Cast: http://www.appalshop.org/film/
78m; U.S.
Director: Karen Vuranch
Synopsis: chronicles the life of a woman living in a West Virginia coal camp of the 1920’s and 30’s
Contact: Teacher’s website at – http://www.coalcampmemories.com/ Access – WV Enterprises at http://www.wventerprises.com/
90m; U.S.
Director: Mari-Lynn Evans and Phylis Geller
Synopsis: Takes us inside modern coal mining. We get to know working miners along with activists who are battling coal companies in Appalachia.