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Category Archives: Labor History

Out of Darkness: The Mine Worker’s Story (1991)

100m; U.S.

Director: Barbara Kopple and Bill Davis

Synopsis: An electrifying documentary by Academy-Award-winning director Barbara Kopple (Harlan County, USA) and award-winning video director and editor Bill Davis. Historical film footage and photographs are integrated with first-hand accounts of Mine Workers’ history and of the recent battle with the Pittston Coal Group. Accompanied by a moving soundtrack created by Tom Juravich, this 100-minute film represents real life stories with a powerful, dramatic touch.

 

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Out of This Furnace: A Walking Tour of Thomas Bell’s Novel (1990)

20m; U.S.

Synopsis: Beautifully realized film by Steffi Domike and narrated by Dave Demarest provides a synopsis of Thomas Bell’s great novel as well as a walking tour of a Braddock that is disappearing before our eyes.

 

Pete Seeger: The Power of Song (2007)

93m; U.S.

Director: Jim Brown

Synopsis: This engaging documentary traces the life of folk icon Pete Seeger, emphasizing his lifelong belief in the power of music as both a social and a political force. Director Brown utilizes contemporary footage of Seeger and his wife,Toshi, along with newly remastered recordings of Seeger¹s songs, and interviews with Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and others. – Rochester Labor Film Series

 

Packingtown USA (1969)

Director: Bill Adelman

Synopsis: Shows the great meat strike of 1904 in Chicago

 

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The Penthouse of Heaven (May Day Chicago) [2006]

27m; U.S.

Director:  Larry Duncan

Synopsis: Illuminates the struggle for justice by workers today and the role of organized labor and many trade unionists in supporting this historic mobilization in the place where May Day started.

Contact: http://www.laborbeat.org

 

Peoes (Metal Workers) [2004]

85m; Brazil

Director: Eduardo Coutinho

Synopsis: 1979 Brazilian Metal Workers Strike.

 

The People Speak

113m; U.S.

Director: Tony Sacco

Cast: Marisa Tomei, Josh Brolin, Sean Penn, Matt Damon, Viggo Mortensen, Kerry Washington, Danny Glover, David Strathairn & more

Synopsis: A look at America’s struggles with war, class, race and women’s rights, with actors and actresses reading excerpts of letters, diaries, and speeches from major figures appearing in Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States.”

Contact: http://thepeoplespeak.com Chris Moore: cmoore@goldiemail.com

 

People of Cumberland (1937)

18m; U.S.

Director: Sidney Meyers & Jay Leyda

Synopsis: A combination documentary and reenacted drama of the struggle of poor whites in the Cumberland mountains building unions and fighting for their rights with the help of the Highlander Folk School

 

The Phantom of the Operator (2004)

A film by Caroline Martel

Canada, 2004, 66 minutes, Color/BW, DVD, French, Subtitled
Order No. W05869
This wry and delightful found-footage film reveals a little-known chapter in labor history: the story of female telephone operators’ central place in the development of global communications. With an eye for the quirky and humorous, Caroline Martel assembles a dazzling array of clips – more than one hundred remarkable, rarely seen industrial, advertising and scientific management films produced in North America between 1903 and 1989 by Bell and Western Electric – and transforms them into a dreamlike montage documentary.

As the first agents of globalization, this invisible army of women offered a way for companies to feminize and glamorize what was a highly stressful, underpaid and difficult job. Not merely “Voices with a Smile,” telephone operators were shooting stars in a universe of infinite progress, test pilots for new management systems, and the face of shrewd public relations campaigns. As the work of operators has been eclipsed by the advent of automated systems, this artful piece of labor history also offers an insightful comment on women’s work, industrialization and communications technology. Refreshing and hilarious, THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERATOR provides a wry yet ethereal portrait of human society in the technocratic age.

available from Women Make Movies
 

Power and the Land (1940)

38m; U.S.

Director: Joris Ivens

Cast: William Adams and Stephen Vincent Benet

Synopsis: A documentary showing the struggle to bring electricity to rural areas of the United States.

 

 
 

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