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Author Archives: Metro Council

El Contrato (2006)

51m; Canada

Director: Min Sook Lee

Synopsis: El Contrato (The Contract) follows Teodoro Bello Martinez, a father of four living in Central Mexico, and several of his countrymen as they make an annual migration to southern Ontario. For eight months of the year the town’s population absorbs 4000 migrant labourers who pick tomatoes for conditions and wages no local will accept. Under a well-meaning government program that allows growers to monitor themselves, the opportunity to exploit workers is as ripe as the fruit they pick. Only men with families to support and no more than an elementary school education need apply. Grievances – among them abusive bosses, unhealthy conditions and paying for benefits they don’t receive – are deflected by a long line of others “back home” who are willing to take their place. Despite a fear of repercussions, the workers voice their desire for dignity and respect, as much as for better working conditions. El Contrato ends as winter closes in and the Mexicans return home. Back in the embrace of their families some pledge, not for the first time and possibly not the last, that it’s their final season in the north. DVD of 2003 original.

 

El Norte (1983)

141m; U.S.

Director: Gregory Nava

Cast: Zaide Silvia Gutiérrez, David Villalpando and Ernesto Gómez Cruz

Synopsis: Mayan Indian peasants, tired of being thought of as nothing more than “brazos fuertes” (“strong arms”, i.e., manual laborers) and organizing in an effort to improve their lot in life, are discovered by the Guatemalan army. After the army destroys their village and family, a brother and sister, teenagers who just barely escaped the massacre, decide they must flee to “El Norte” (“the North”, i.e., the USA). After receiving clandestine help from friends and humorous advice from a veteran immigrant on strategies for traveling through Mexico, they make their way by truck, bus and other means to Los Angeles, where they try to make a new life as young, uneducated, and undocumented immigrants.

 

The Electric Valley (1983)

Director: Ross Spears

Synopsis (WorldCat): Presents the fifty-year controversial history of the Tennessee Valley Authority, focusing on the officials who led it and the people whose lives were touched by it.

Website: http://www.ageefilms.org/ev.html

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary

 

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The Emerging Woman (1974)

40m; U.S.

Director: The Women’s Film Project

Synopsis: Uses film clips, old photographs, and newsreel footage to trace women’s struggle to attain equal rights in education, employment, politics and in the courts.

 

Encounters at the End of the World (2007)

99m; U.S.

Director: Werner Herzog

Synopsis: A study of the motives and philosophies of marine biologists, physicists, plumbers, and truck drivers who work in extreme conditions as far away from society as one can get at the Antarctic compound of the National Science Foundation.

Contact: Werner Herzog Filmproduktion Spiegelgasse 9 Vienna 1010 Austria Phone: +43 1 512 9444 Fax: +43 1 512 9398 http://www.wernerherzog.com/ office@wernerherzog.com

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary

 

The End of St. Petersburg (1927)

80m; U.S.S.R.

Director: Vsevolod Pudovkin, Mikhail Doller

Cast: Vera Baranovskaya, Aleksandr Chistyakov and Ivan Chuvelyov

Synopsis: A peasant comes to St. Petersburg to find work. He unwittingly helps in the arrest of an old village friend who is now a labor leader. The unemployed peasant is also arrested and sent to fight in World War I. After three years, he returns ready for revolution.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Drama, Organizing, Politics, War, Working Class

 

End of the Line (2008)

76m; Brazil

Director: Gustavo Steinberg

Cast: Rubens de Falco, Leonardo Medeiros, Maria Padilha, Daniela Camargo, Gisella Reiman, Lulu Pavarin, Turíbio Ruiz

Synopsis: Humorous, satirical and cleverly constructed début by Steinberg slowly but surely knots together seven stories from everyday Brazilian life. It all comes down to money, money, money: from the Indians who want to be paid for their rain dance to the politician who just can’t help winning the lottery, time and again.

Contact: Hubert Bals Fund (http://www.fimdalinha.com.br/index_en.html) / Hubert Bals Fund, bits@osfilmes.com.br

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Drama, Working Class

 

End of the Rainbow (2007)

52m or 83m; 

Director: Robert Nugent

Synopsis: End of the Rainbow provides a concise, in-depth look at the impact of global extractive industries on local populations, their economy, their traditions and their environment. It depicts in striking details the confrontation of two cultures, one indigenous the other a unique reflection of the age of globalization. The film uses a gold mine in Guinea to explore whether concessions granted to transnational corporations are in the interest of the companies, the governing elite or the local community.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary, Global Economy, Politics

 

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Enjoy Poverty (2008)

52m

Director: Renzo Martins

Synopsis: An investigation of the emotional and economic value of Africa’s most lucrative export: filmed poverty. Deep in the interiors of the Congo, Dutch artist Renzo Martens single-handedly undertakes an epic journey and launches an emancipatory program that helps the poor become aware of what is their primary capital resource: Poverty

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary, Global Economy

 

Enthusiasm (1931)

67m

Director: Dziga Vertov

Synopsis (WorldCat): Dziga Vertov’s first sound film, a documentary on the coal miners of the Don Basin, is notable for its experiemental use of sound montages, organized by Vertov with an attention equal to his complex segmented visuals, so that each element possesses both autonomy and a contrapuntal, denotational relation to the other.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary

 

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