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Category Archives: Global Economy

Haiti’s Tourniquet (2008)

19m; U.S.

Director: Diane Krauthamer

Synopsis: The Confederation of Haitian Workers (CTH) invited an Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) delegation to Haiti to learn about their fight against “le plan neoliberal” and recruit help in the form of material aid and solidarity. The delegation was in Haiti April 24 to May 5 2008, two weeks after the country erupted in mass protest at burgeoning food prices. This video shares the stories and experiences

 

Hands of Harvest

Directr: Adrian Muys

Synopsis/Contact:  This is Adrian Muys writing, the filmmaker you met at the AFI. Here is a short summary of Hands of Harvest and how the AFL-CIO would fit into it. Hands of Harvest chronicles the journey of a group of Mexican women who travel on work visas from the Hidalgo region to the Eastern Shore of Maryland to pick crabs in seafood plants. The film focuses on the H2-B visa program and how it has impacted the culture of both a small Maryland fishing village and a remote hamlet in Mexico. What I would like to interview someone at the AFL-CIO about it their stance on visa workers and how it has affected the American work force. Hands of Harvest is about workers, both American and Mexican, who will go to great lengths to support their families and uphold traditions and I have always taken an unbiased approach to the film in order to get as many opinions as possible about a subject that is very important at this moment in US labor history. I think having the opinion of the AFL-CIO would widen the scope of the film and bring another important point of view to the table. Please call me if you have any questions about the film: (917) 743-3714 Thanks Adrian Muys Chapel Cove Productions adrianmuys@yahoo.com

 

Have You Heard from Johannesburg (2010)

Director: Connie Field

Synopsis: The Road to Resistance (58 mins.) In 1948, South Africa institutes apartheid, a system of segregation that infiltrates every aspect of life. The Sharpeville Massacre shocks the world, and Nelson Mandela and other leaders of the African National Congress (ANC) are jailed. Hundreds escape into exile. Hell of a Job (58 mins.) Oliver Tambo heads the resistance from exile (opposition within South Africa has been effectively crushed). A worldwide movement begins with support from the Soviet Union and Sweden. The New Generation (58 mins.) The Soweto Uprising, led by a younger generation, inspires an international response; apartheid opponent Steve Biko is murdered; the United Nations issues a mandatory arms embargo against South Africa. Fair Play (95 mins.) An international sports boycott takes shape when African teams refuse to compete in the Olympics with South Africa’s all-white teams. Only SA’s world champion Springboks rugby team remains on the field. [Clint Eastwood’s INVICTUS features the Springboks during the post-apartheid era.] From Selma to Soweto (90 mins.) With the success of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, African-Americans push for economic sanctions against South Africa. Despite President Reagan’s opposition, Congress finally imposes sanctions. The Bottom Line (83 mins.) Employees and consumers worldwide pressure Polaroid, General Motors, Barclay’s Bank and other corporate giants to divest from South Africa. A financial crisis ensues when a mass exodus of corporations isolates the white regime. Free at Last (75 mins.) The campaign to free Nelson Mandela (imprisoned 27 years) gains momentum. His release, coupled with ongoing international pressure and an unstoppable internal mass movement, lead to the toppling of apartheid and the holding of democratic elections.

This brilliant series on the most important international social justice movement of the 20th century is a landmark work of global significance.”—Professor Clayborne Carson, Stanford University “EXEMPLARY… A TRIUMPH of maximalist filmmaking. Field’s nonfiction epic is a monumental chronicle not just of one nation and its hideous regime, but of the second half of the 20th century. … deftly toggles between the macro and the micro.” –The Village Voice, “Every part could stand on its own, Yet the doc’s real impact is cumulative.” —Time Out New York CRITICS’ PICK! Engrossing and surprisingly exciting… –New York magazine “Like THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS, functions almost as a manual on how to topple an unjust regime.” –The New York Times “Mandatory viewing! Epic! Exhilarating! More compelling and instructive than any fictionalized movies on the subject. The figure who stands out as the blood, guts, and mind of the movement… is Oliver Tambo. Shown in rare interview footage, he emerges as a dynamic leader of impressive intellect and courage. (The film) demonstrates Field’s talent for weaving an extraordinarily complex tapestry of historical events and international personages into a dramatic structure, complete with climax and catharsis. The number of impressive individuals that Field has assembled to flesh out this story is astounding. —Artforum Essential viewing…thoroughly gripping.. –Hollywood Reporter “EYE OPENING! a staggering, panoramic film history — Vanity Fair “Simply the most important documentary of the year, if not the decade… —SF Weekly

Contact: Connie Field, Producer/Director Clarity Films The Saul Zaentz Film Center 2600 Tenth Street, Suite 412 Berkeley, CA 94710 Tele: 510-841-3469 Cell; 510-289-5025 Connie@clarityfilms.org http://www.clarityfilms.org/

 

Heart of Factory (Corazon de Fabrica) [2008]

129 (long); 56 (short)
Argentina
Director: Virna Molina & Ernesto Ardito

Synopsis: The Ceramic Zanon – Fasinpat workers work in one of the most important and largest ceramic factories of South America. As a result of the owners plan to close it, the workers occupied the factory and are now running the factory themselves under workers control without bosses or owners. New threats emerged as they struggle against a political and economic system that tries to crush them and their control of the factory.

Contact: WWW.CDFDOC.COM.AR Virna Molina y Ernesto Ardito Paraguay 4554 1ºC CP 1425 CABA Argentina (+54-11) 4775-5026 nikargentina@ciudad.com.ar / info@cdfdoc.com.ar

 

Hector Girado: A Colombian Story (2004)

25m; Colombia

Director: Julie Rosenberg

Synopsis: Details Hector Girado, trade unionist, move to US after receiving death sentences.

 

The Hidden Face of Globalization

Synopsis: Sweatshops in Bangladesh

 

The Global Assembly Line (1986)

58m; U.S.

Director: Lorraine Gray

Synopsis: Traveling from Tennessee to Mexico’s northern border, from Silicon Valley to the Philippines, The Global Assembly Line takes viewers inside our new global economy. A vivid portrayal of the lives of working women and men in the “free trade zones” of developing countries and North America, as U.S. industries close their factories to search the globe for lower-wage workforces. We take a rare look at the people who are making the clothing we wear and the electronics goods we use–as well as the business decisions behind manufacturing–on the global assembly line.

Director/Producer/Creator/Executive Producer/National & International distributor of the documentary films by Lorraine W Gray: With Babies & Banners and The Global Assembly Line.
 
 

Buyer Be Fair: The Promise of Product Certification (2006)

57m

Director: John de Graaf and Hana Jindrova

Synopsis (Bull Frog Films): Under the auspices of the WTO, globalization of world trade seems like a juggernaut that will not be stopped. But is there a way to make trade FAIR? How can retailers and consumers use their purchasing power and market choice to make the world better for people and the environment? What is the promise of product certification and labeling?

BUYER BE FAIR looks at two major trade goods — timber and coffee — to find out how certification works and whether it helps the world’s poor, and their lands. Can the lessons from certification of timber, by the Forest Stewardship Council, and coffee, by Fair Trade, be applied to other products?

Website: http://www.buyerbefair.org/

 

Bölge (The Zone) [2010]

40m; Turkey

Director: Güliz Saglam, Feryal Saygiligil

Synopsis: Seven workers, all women. Four free-trade zones in four different Turkish cities. Surrounded by high walls, barbed wire fences, very much like a concentration camp. This documentary covers the working conditions of women in the free-trade zones, their experiences, observations and their hopes for the future. The barbed wire fences not only surround the zones but also accentuate the captivity of women workers. So much so that the borders of the zone evade us, inside and outside become indistinguishable.

 

COSATU and the Freedom Charter (1987)

60m; South Africa

Director:

Synopsis: Documentary detailing labor strikes by South African unions against the apartheid regime.