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Category Archives: Genre

Time to Tackle Climate Change (2010)

20m

Synopsis: Showcases trade unions´ concrete experiences, challenges, opportunities, and commitments for action on climate change and features contributions from over 45 trade union organizations from all over the world. Unions´messages for action highlight that the environment, employment, social justice and a just transition are all part of the same fight.

Contact: Julianna Angelova Sustainlabour International Labour Foundation for Sustainable Development Fundación Internacional Laboral para el Desarrollo Sostenible C/ Pedro Teixeira, 3 1ºC 28020 Madrid, SPAIN Tel: +34 91 4491045 jangelova@sustainlabour.

 
 

To Kill a Priest (1988)

117m; U.S.

Director: Agnieszka Holland

Cast: Christopher Lambert, Ed Harris and Joss Ackland

Synopsis (IMDB): A young priest speaks out against the Communist regime in Poland and is killed for it.

 

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Drama, Politics

 

To Save the Land and the People (1999)

59m; U.S.

Director: Anne Lewis

Synopsis: Strip or “surface” mining – where coal is blasted and scraped from the mountain surface – increased dramatically in the Appalachian region in 1961 when the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) signed contracts to buy over 16 million tons of strip-mined coal. Though cheaper for the buyer than deep-mined coal, the damage done by strip mining was far reaching and had immediate impact on coalfield residents. To Save the Land and People is a history of the early grassroots efforts to stop strip mining in eastern Kentucky, where “broad form” deeds, signed at the beginning of the 20th Century, were used by coal operators to destroy the surface land without permission or compensation of the surface owner. The program focuses on the Appalachian Group to Save the Land and People, whose members used every means possible – from legal petitions and local ordinances, to guns and dynamite – to fight strip mining. The documentary makes a powerful statement about the land and how we use it, and how its misuse conflicts with local cultures and values.

Contact: Anne Lewis 512-656-0507 (cell) http://www.annelewis.org

 
 

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To Sleep with Anger (1990)

101m; U.S.

Director: Charles Burnett

Cast: Danny Glover, Paul Butler and DeVaughn Nixon

Synopsis (Wikipedia): Harry Mention (Danny Glover), an enigmatic drifter from the South, comes to visit an old acquaintance named Gideon (Paul Butler), who now lives in South-Central Los Angeles. Harry’s charming, down-home manner hides a malicious penchant for stirring up trouble, and he exerts a strange and powerful effect on Gideon and his thoroughly assimilated black, middle-class family, including wife Suzie (Mary Alice) and sons Junior (Carl Lumbly) and Babe Brother (Richard Brooks).

After Gideon suffers a stroke, Harry’s influence over the family grows, in particular over Babe Brother, the youngest son. Harry introduces him to a lifestyle of drinking and gambling, and encourages him to leave his wife to join Harry and his friends on the road. However, before Babe Brother gets a chance to leave, Junior confronts him. They fight, and their mother gets stabbed in the hand trying to separate them. After taking her to the hospital, Babe Brother decides to stay with his family instead of joining Harry. When Harry comes back to collect some things, he slips on some marbles belonging to Babe Brother’s son, and dies. Soon after, Gideon gets out of his bed for the first time in months, causing the viewer to question the relationship between Harry’s presence in the house and Gideon’s sickness.

 
 

To The Bitter End

58m; South Korea

Director: Jun-sik

Synopsis: Korean workers fight Worker Dispatch Law

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Documentary, Organizing, Politics

 

To The Workers of The World (2002)

4m; U.S.

Director: Tammy Gold

Synopsis: Tribute to workers who died at World Trade Towers in 2001.

Contact: 212-772-4953; tgold@hunter.cuny.edu tamigold@mindspring.com

 

Tobacco Road (1941)

84m; U.S.

Director: John Ford

Cast: Charley Grapewin, Gene Tierney and Marjorie Rambeau

Synopsis (IMDB): Shiftless Jeeter Lester and his family of hillbilly stereotypes live in a rural backwater where their ancestors were once wealthy planters. Their slapstick existence is threatened by a bank’s plans to take over the land for more profitable farming; subplots involve the affairs and marriages of son Dude and daughter Ellie May.

 
 

Together We Win: The Fight to Organize Starbucks (2006)

15m; U.S.

Director: Diane Krauthamer

Synopsis: A short documentary that chronicles the struggles and victories of the Starbucks Workers Union, from how it formed, to members continuing to organize.

Contact: Diane Krauthamer iw@iww.org

 

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Together We’re Stronger (2008)

Director: Claire Harbage

Synopsis: Personal accounts of UCSC (CA) workers and their roles in union struggle. Work in progress; mostly of local interest.

Contact: Claire Harbage charbage@ucsc.edu

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Documentary, Education, Organizing

 

Tokyo Sonata (2009)

121m; Japan

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

Cast: Teruyuki Kagawa (Ryuhei Sasaki), Kyoko Koizumi (Megumi Sasaki), Yu Koyanagi (Takashi Sasaki), Kai Inowaki (Kenji Sasaki), Haruka Igawa (Kaneko), Kanji Tsuda (Kurosu), Koji Yakusho (Thief)

Synopsis (IMDB): An ordinary Japanese family slowly disintegrates after its patriarch loses his job at a prominent company.

Contact: Regent Releasing 310-806-4288 info@regentreleasing.com http://www.regentreleasing.com