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Category Archives: Occupation/Type of Work

It Should Happen to You (1954)

86m; U.S.

Director: George Cukor

Cast: Judy Holliday, Jack Lemmon and Peter Lawford

Synopsis: Gladys Glover has just lost her modelling job when she meets filmmaker Pete Sheppard shooting a documentary in Central Park. For Pete it’s love at first sight, but Gladys has her mind on other things — like making a name for herself. Through a fluke of advertising she winds up with her name plastered over 10 billboards throughout city. Suddenly all of New York is clamoring for Gladys Glover without knowing why and playboy Evan Adams III is making a play for Gladys that even Pete knows will be hard to beat.

 
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Posted by on March 23, 2012 in Comedy, White Collar, Women

 

Jack Johnson, the Big Fights (1970)

90m; U.S.

Director: William Cayton

Synopsis: Story of black boxer who was forced into exile in 1910.

 
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Posted by on March 23, 2012 in Blacks, Documentary, Sports

 

James’ Journey to Jerusalem (2003)

91m; Israel

Director: Ra’anan Alexandrowicz

Cast: Siyabonga Melongisi ShibeSalim Dau and Arieh Elias

Synopsis (Wikipedia): The film’s plot focuses on an African teenager named James (Siyabonga Melongisi Shibe) whom hails from the fictional African village Entshongweni, who goes on a pilgrimage journey, on behalf of his village, towards the Holy LandIsrael, and especially in order to come to Jerusalem. Upon arriving in Israel, James is suspected to be an illegal foreign worker and as a result he is arrested. Shimi (Salim Daw), a contractor of foreign workers, releases him on bail to work with him. After James explains to him that he did not travel to Israel to work, Shimi clarifies to him that since he paid for his release, James now owes him. Therefore James is forced to interrupt his journey and begin working for Shimi.

 

The Job (2007)

4m; U.S.

Director: Jonathan Browning, Shaun Greenspan

Synopsis: The tables are turned on a group of white collar professionals in this amusing tale set in a parallel universe right here on earth.

Contact: Youtube link to watch the movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XGJq8wrw5I Film

Website: http://www.thejobtheshort.com/

 

I Am A Man: Dr. King and the 1968 AFSCME Memphis Sanitation Strike

Synopsis: On April 3, 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. traveled to Memphis to support AFSCME sanitation workers. That evening, he delivered his famous “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” speech to a packed room of supporters. The next day, he was assassinated. (NOTE: see At The River I Stand for a 56m version of this issue).

 

I Am Cuba (1964)

141m; U.S.S.R.-Cuba

Director: Mikhail Kalatozov

Cast: Sergio CorrieriSalvador Wood and José Gallardo

Synopsis (IMDB): Four vignettes in Batista’s Cuba dramatize the need for revolution; long, mobile shots tell almost wordless stories. In Havana, Maria faces shame when a man who fancies her discovers how she earns her living. Pedro, an aging peasant, is summarily told that the land he farms has been sold to United Fruit. A university student faces down a crowd of swaggering U.S. sailors and then watches friends shot by police when they try to distribute a pro-Castro leaflet. The war arrives on the doorstep of peasants Mariano, Amelia, and their four children when Batista’s forces bomb the hills. Mariano wants peace, so he seeks out the guerrillas to join the fight. If nothing else, an incredible example of pure film-making with stunning and innovative camera work.

 

I Can Get It For You Wholesale (1951)

91m; U.S.

Director: Michael Gordon

Cast: Susan Hayward, Dan Dailey and George Sanders

Synopsis (IMDB): A ruthless fashion designer steps on everyone in her way in order to reach the top of her profession. Eventually she is forced to choose between her ambition and the man she loves.

 

 

I Know I’m Not Alone (2004)

93m; U.S.

Director: Michael Franti

Synopsis: Musician and activist Michael Franti’s documentary on his mission of peace in the Middle East.

Contact: Alex Lawson alex.lawson@gmail.com 847.219.8393 http://www.iknowimnotalone.com/ Guerrilla Management 2180 Bryant Street STE #206 San Francisco, CA 94110 415.865.2170

 

I Really Hate My Job (2007)

90m; U.K.

Director: Olive Clark

Synopsis: The story of the lives of five waitresses stuck in a second rate London restaurant with delusions of grandeur. Customers come and go, unaware of the real concerns of these women; a rat or two in the kitchen, bitter arguments about life and art, as well as a coup d’état in the kitchen… all overshadowed by the anticipation of a booking by a famous Hollywood film star.

 

A bientôt j’espère: Be Seeing You (1968)

38m; Franc9

Director: Mario Marret and Chris Marker

Synopsis: From 1967 to 1976 Chris Marker was a member of SLON (the “Company for the Launching of New Works”). One of several groups that emerged in those years in which filmmakers, militants, and others came together on a cooperative, parallel basis, SLON was based on the idea that cinema should not be thought of solely in terms of commerce. 1967 was also the year an important strike broke out at Rhodiaceta, a textile plant owned by the Rhone-Poulenc trust in the city of Besançon, France. The strike was unusual in character because the workers refused to disassociate the industrial conflict from a social and cultural agenda. The workers’ demands concerned not only salary and job security, but also the very lifestyle imposed on them by society. So it was only natural that Chris Marker, along with other technicians and members of SLON, would visit Besançon to document the strike, and the lives and attitudes of the workers. The film’s most important moments are composed of conversations with workers and their wives. They believe the working class is increasingly at the mercy of a system that gives them no power, a system that would like them to remain powerless. And so it was that their local demands grew into questions about the larger political system. The strikers eventually returned to work with few gains, but had developed a sense of their power, which helped lay the groundwork for May ’68, when France was rocked by revolutionary protests.

Contact: http://icarusfilms.com/new2003/bien.html