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Category Archives: Genre

Cama Adrento (2004)

83m; Argentina

Director: Jorge Gaggero

Synopsis: A wealthy woman and her live-in housekeeper must adjust their entrenched routines and relationship when Buenos Aires is plunged into an economic crisis.

 
 

Camera Buff (1979) (aka Amator)

Director: Krzysztof KieslowskiCameraBuff
117M

Writers: Krzysztof Kieslowski (dialogue), Jerzy Stuhr(dialogue)

Camera Buff (PolishAmator, meaning “amateur”) is a 1979 Polish film written and directed by Krzysztof Kieślowski and starring Jerzy Stuhr. The film is about a humble factory worker whose newfound hobby, amateur film, becomes an obsession, and transforms his modest and formerly contented life.[1] Camera Buff won the Polish Film Festival Golden Lion Award and the Moscow International Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize and Golden Prize in 1979, and the Berlin International Film Festival Otto Dibelius Film Award in 1980. (Wikipedia)
 

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Campamento (1972)

Chile

Director: Tom Cohen and Richard Pearce

Synopsis: Depicts unalienated labor of slum dwellers who rebuild their own village in Allende’s Chile.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary, Politics, Working Class

 

Can’t Do It In Europe (2006)

46m

Director: Charlotta Copcutt, Anna Weitz & Anna Klara Åhrén

Synopsis: CAN’T DO IT IN EUROPE portrays this new phenomenon of ‘reality tourism,’ whereby bored American or European travelers seek out real-life experiences as exciting tourist “adventures.” The film follows a group of such international tourists as they visit the mines in Potosi—the poorest city in the poorest nation in Latin America—where Bolivian miners work by hand, just as they did centuries ago, to extract silver from the earth.

Contact: http://icarusfilms.com/new2006/cant.html

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

 

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Canada’s Sweetheart: The Saga of Hal C. Banks (1985)

114m

Director: Donald Brittain

Synopsis (NFB): Harold Chamberlain Banks, a convicted felon and union strongarm, was recruited in 1949 to break up the communist-controlled unions that were blocking the country’s shipping industry and to replace them with a Canadian chapter of the Seafarers’ International Union (SIU). This gripping docudrama, based on eyewitness accounts and courtroom testimony, recalls thirteen turbulent years of violence and corruption during which the careers of 6 000 seamen were destroyed by the power of one man, Banks. Canada’s Sweetheart recounts the events leading up to 1962, when a small group summoned the courage to stand up to Banks and his organization. This challenge resulted in the government-appointed Norris Commission hearings–a landmark in Canadian labor history.

Wesbite: http://www.onf-nfb.gc.ca/eng/collection/film/?id=16132

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Drama, Labor History

 

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Capitalism Hits The Fan; Richard Wolff on the Economic Meltdown (2008)

57m; U.S.

Director:

Synopsis: Renowned University of Massachusetts Economics Professor Richard Wolff breaks down the root causes of today’s economic crisis, showing how it was decades in the making and in fact reflects seismic failures within the structures of American-style capitalism itself.

Contact: http://www.capitalismhitsthefan.com/

 
 

Captain Boycott (1947)

92m; Ireland

Director: Frank Launder

Cast: Stewart Granger, Kathleen Ryan and Cecil Parker

Synopsis (NYT): Briskly, this “Captain Boycott” tells us how tenant farmers in Parnell’s Irish Land League resisted an outrageously haughty landowner, Captain Boycott by name, with a technique of non-cooperation when he persisted in bleeding them for rents, and how this treatment, in the end, was more effective than an advocated plan of violence.

 

Car Wash (1976)

97m; U.S.

Director: Michael Schultz 

Cast: Richard Pryor, Franklyn Ajaye and Darrow Igus

Synopsis: Car Wash is about a close-knit group of black employees who one day have all manner of strange visitors coming onto their forecourt, including Richard Pryor as a preaching ‘wonder-man’ who is loved by most but loathed by one, and a man who looks like a thief by the way he is holding his bottle, but it is really his urine sample as he is off to the hospital. T.C’s love life takes a turn for the better and the songs keep coming

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Blacks, Comedy, Service Workers

 

Capitalism: A Love Story (2009)

127m; U.S.

Director: Michael Moore

Synopsis: On the 20-year anniversary of his groundbreaking masterpiece “Roger & Me,” Michael Moore’s “Capitalism: A Love Story” comes home to the issue he’s been examining throughout his career: the disastrous impact of corporate dominance on the everyday lives of Americans. But this time the culprit is much bigger than General Motors, and the crime scene is far wider than Flint, Michigan.

 

Carbide and Sorrel (1963)

80m

Director: Frank Beyer

Synopsis (First Run Features): A hilarious and rare classic of German cinema, CARBIDE AND SORREL is a road trip adventure set in the last days of World War II. In a brilliant performance, Erwin Geschonneck plays Kalle, a non-smoking cigarette factory worker who – dogged by every possible mishap – must travel hundreds of miles without a truck to get a load of carbide back to Dresden, where his chain-smoking co-workers can use them to weld their ruined factory back together.