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Category Archives: Labor History

Rebellion in Patagonia (1974)

110m; Argentina

Director: Héctor Olivera

Cast: Pedro AleandroHéctor Alterio and Luis Brandoni

Synopsis (New York Times): “Rebellion in Patagonia” covers a great deal of ground in the sweeping style of the muralist, opening with the assassination of an Army colonel in Buenos Aires in 1923 and then going back several years to describe the events leading up to that assassination.

Most of the action takes place on the broad plains of Patagonia, one of the most beautiful, most spooky landscapes on earth. It was there that a coalition of Communists and anarchists had successfully organized the workers on the sheep farms. When the landowners later refuse to honor their agreements, new strikes break out and the Army chief, once sympathetic to populist cause, sets out to break the movement in a campaign that’s estimated to have taken the lives of 3,000 workers.

The film is a collection of vignettes, richly detailed with the sort of character and incident that recall nostalgically but without sentimentality the sense of high purpose of early trade-unionism. The movie has a great fondness for these seminal labor fighters, including a young Spanish activist (Luis Brandoni) who is also a realist, and a fine old German idealist (Pepe Soriano) who puts his life on the line for his beliefs.

It’s not all black versus white, though. Mr. Olivera defines divisions within the ranks of both sides, sometimes tragically and often wittily, as in an early trade-union meeting when the success of a strike is celebrated by the Communists with a rousing anthem while their nonpoliticized Chilean compatriots look on aghast. They haven’t yet been taught that politics can be expressed in song.

 

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Remembering William C. Blizzard (2009)

55m; U.S.

Director: Kelley Thompson

Synopsis: Blizzard, who passed away in late December 2008 at the age of 92, was the son of “The General of the Battle of Blair Mountain,” Bill Blizzard. Recently, The National Register of Historic Places placed Blair Mountain on its official list.

Contact: Steve Fesenmaier, Film Programmer for the West Virginia Films Series at the South Charleston Museum 907 Churchill Circle Charleston, WV 25314 304-345-5850 Also, board member, WVLHA mystery12@suddenlink.net Work – 558-3978 ext. 2015 fesenms@wvlc.lib.wv.us

 
 

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The Rise of Big Business (1969)

27m; U.S.

Director: Encyclopedia Brittanica Educational Corporation

Synopsis: A portrait of the rise of industrial tycoons proposes that, after the Civil War, a combination of economic conditions and the efforts of various individuals produced the large business organizations. Shows the impact of the new economic structure on the lives of workers.

 

The Rise of Labor (1968)

30m; U.S.

Director: Encyclopedia Britannica Educational Corporation

Synopsis: Traces history of the American labor movement. Discusses working conditions from the 19th century to 1960s, the effects of early strikes in changing governmental attitudes toward labor and the AFL and CIO.

 
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Posted by on April 26, 2012 in Documentary, Labor History

 

The Rise of Organized Labor (1960)

18m; U.S.

Director: McGraw-Hill Book Company

Synopsis: The historic and economic determinants of unionism are examined to illustrate trends in economic problems influencing unionization.

 
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Posted by on April 26, 2012 in Documentary, Labor History

 

Rising from the Rails: The Story of the Pullman Porter

47m; U.S.

Director: Brad Osborne

Director: Glenn Bradley, Lindsey Holloway and Evan Mason

Synopsis: RISING FROM THE RAILS: THE STORY OF THE PULLMAN PORTER, a documentary based on the best-selling book by Larry Tye, chronicles the relatively unheralded Pullman Porters, generations of African American men who served as caretakers to wealthy white passengers on luxury trains that traversed the nation during the golden age of rail. Unbeknownst to most of their white passengers, porters played critical political and cultural roles, becoming trailblazers in the struggle for African American dignity and self-sufficiency, patriarchs of black labor unions, and helping give birth to the Civil Rights Movement. Ultimately, however, their greatest legacy is that which they left to future generations.

 

The River Ran Red

Director: Steffi Domike and Nicole Fauteux.

Synopsis: Blair Brown narrates this gripping account of a community’s struggle to preserve its way of life. In the summer of 1892, a bitter conflict erupted at the Carnegie Works in Homestead, Pennsylvania. The nation’s largest steelmaker took on its most militant labor union, with devastating consequences for American workers. Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick head a fascinating cast of characters which includes 300 armed Pinkerton guards, and the would-be assassin, anarchist Alexander Berkman. To evoke the strike and its century old legacy, the film employs documentary techniques, primary sources, dramatically staged scenes shot on location in the Pittsburgh area, and lyrical commentary found in poetry, song and fiction.

 

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Rocking the Foundations (1986)

92m; Australia

Director: Pat Fiske

Synopsis: Australian documentary about the New South Wales Builders’ Labourers’ Federation, 1940-1975 — a union that broke the rules.

Contact: Ronin Films PO Box 1005 Civic Square Canberra, ACT 2608 Australia Phn: +61 2 6248 0851 Fax: +61 2 6249 1640 http://www.roninfilms.com.au orders@roninfilms.com.au

 

Struggles in Steel: The Fight for Equal Opportunity (1996)

58m; U.S.

Director: Tony Buba, Raymond Henderson

Cast: Raymond Henderson, Dennis C. Dickerson and Katrina Heiss

Synopsis (IMDB): This documentary tells the forgotten story of the African-American struggle for equality in the U.S. steel industry (based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania). In a series of interviews intermixed with archival footage and stills, we learn how these workers faced and overcame discrimination that came from white workers, the big steel companies, and even from their own unions.

 

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Sacco & Vanzetti (1971)

120m; Italy

Director: Giuliano Montaldo

Cast: Gian Maria Volonté, Riccardo Cucciolla and Cyril Cusack

Synopsis: The story of two anarchists who were charged and unfairly tried for murder when it was really for their political convictions.