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Category Archives: Manufacturing

Performing the Border (1999)

42m

Director: Ursula Biemann

Synopsis (Women Make Movies): A video essay set in the Mexican-U.S. border town of Ciudad Juarez, where U.S. multinational corporations assemble electronic and digital equipment just across from El Paso, Texas. This imaginative, experimental work investigates the growing feminization of the global economy and its impact on Mexican women living and working in the area. Looking at the border as both a discursive and material space, the video explores the sexualization of the border region through labor division, prostitution, the expression of female desires in the entertainment industry, and sexual violence in the public sphere. Candid interviews with Mexican women factory and sex workers, as well as activists and journalists, are combined with scripted voiceover analysis, screen text, scenes and sounds recorded on site, and found footage to give new insights into the gendered conditions inscribed by the high-tech industry at its low-wage end.

Website: http://www.wmm.com/filmcatalog/pages/c474.shtml

 
 

The Ford Massacre (1932)

8m

Producer: Detroit Workers’ Newsreel Special

Synopsis (BAM/PFA): The only newsreel coverage of the historic mass march in downtown Detroit on February 4, 1932, against the starvation program of Hoover/Murphy, and the armed, unprovoked attack by Dearborn police and Ford “guards” on unemployed auto workers at the gates of the River Rouge plant.

 

Strike in Town (1955)

37m

Director: Leslie McFarlane

Synopsis (NFB): This short film depicts the act of collective bargaining common to Canadian industry and shows how it affected a union, a company and a community. In Strike in Town the events that led to a deadlock in negotiations between management and employees at a furniture factory are staged against the backdrop of a one-industry town. It’s the story of a strike nobody wanted, but which everyone was powerless to stop.

Website: http://www.nfb.ca/film/strike_in_town

 

Experience Fenton (2000)

28m

Synopsis: Traces history of the Fenton Art Glass Company, emphasizing the importance of the relationship between the Fenton management and the glass workers who produce the products.

More information available at: http://www.fentonartglass.com/

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary, Manufacturing

 

Eight Hours Don’t Make a Day (1972/3)

471m

Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Synopsis: West German television series on the lives of factory tool makers.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Drama, Manufacturing

 

A Whole Lott More (2013)

Director: Victor Buhler

Synopsis: Chronicles three workers with developmental disabilities at Lott Industries, an auto parts factory in Toledo, OH.

Website: http://awholelottmore.com/

http://awholelottmore.com/screenings

 

 
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Posted by on January 24, 2012 in Documentary, Manufacturing

 

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See It Now: Automation (June 9, 1957)

82m

Broadcast Date:  June 9, 1957

Network: CBS

Synopsis (WorldCat): Filmed exploration of how automation was changing the way America worked and how computers and automatic machines were revolutionizing industry, including the replacement of workers by machines. Includes interviews with Walter Reuther, then president of the UAW and vice-president of the AFL-CIO, Thomas J. Watson Jr., then head of IBM, and others. An in-depth exploration of the beginning of the age beyond the Industrical Revolution. [With Edward Murrow]

 
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Posted by on January 24, 2012 in Automation, Documentary, Manufacturing

 

Note by Note: The Making of Steinway L1037 (2007)

81m; U.S.
Director: Ben Niles

In our age of mass-production and consumption, what is the role of the musician — both an instrument’s craftsman and its player? Musically, what have we gained? More importantly, what are we losing?

Pianos in the conditioning roomPianos rest in the conditioning room for up to eight weeks to season the wood.

The most thoroughly handcrafted instruments in the world, Steinway pianos are as unique and full of personality as the world-class musicians who play them. However, their makers are a dying breed: skilled cabinetmakers, gifted tuners, thorough hand-crafters.

Note By Note is a feature-length independent documentary that follows the creation of a Steinway concert grand — #L1037 — from forest floor to concert hall. It explores the relationship between musician and instrument, chronicles the manufacturing process, and illustrates what makes each Steinway unique in this age of mass production.

From the factory floor in Queens to Steinway Hall in Manhattan, each piano’s journey is complex — spanning 12 months, 12,000 parts, 450 craftsmen, and countless hours of fine-tuned labor. Filmed in key Steinway locations — the factory, Steinway’s reserved “Bank,” and private auditions — Note By Note is a loving celebration of not only craftsmanship, but also a dying breed of person who is deeply connected to working by hand.

Richly cinematic and surprisingly emotional, Note By Note has found diverse audiences, both in America and around the globe. From musicians to wood-workers, educators to journalists, jazz-aficionados to indie rockers, the film brings together many interests in the themes it weaves.

The bridgeThe bridge must be notched for the strings in the “belly” department. It takes years of training for the craftsmen to master the task of notching the bridge.

Historically, the film touches on the impact of the digital era on a stalwart business like Steinway. Artistically, it touches on the creative process as various artists select concert pianos for upcoming performances — each piano’s attributes and nuances as discrete and intriguing as the next.

 

Lastly, the film touches on musical themes throughout — weaving a common thread of emotion and delight in a carefully selected score that ranges from cartoon favorites “Tom & Jerry” to complex modern pieces performed by famed pianist Pierre Laurent Aimard.

In the end, this is an ode to the most unexpected, and perhaps ironic, of unsung heroes. It reminds us how extraordinary the dialogue can be between an artist and an instrument — crafted out of human hands but borne of the materials of nature.

Recommended for viewers of all ages, the film is frequently used in educational settings and for community events such as fundraisers or study groups. The website, http://notebynotethemovie.com/ offers additional information about various parts of the film, as well as interactive features such as “Piano Stories” where fans share tales of their own relationships with their Steinway.

PBS website source: http://www.pbs.org/programs/note-by-note/

 

Roger & Me (1989)

91m; U.S.

Director: Michael Moore

Synopsis: Michael Moore’s documentary about the decline of Flint, Michigan and the role of GM in the deindustrialization of a once-thriving industrial city.

 

 

 

 

 

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Work Hard, Play Hard (Violence des échanges en milieu tempéré) [2006]

99m; France

Director: Jean-Marc Moutout

Cast: Jérémie Renier, Laurent Lucas and Cylia Malki

Synopsis (IMDB): Philippe Seigner, a charming business school graduate from the French Pyrenees, starts his career in business consulting at the posh Paris seat of McGregor. His first serious task is a delicate one, an audit at the Janson food cans factory in the provinces, which is about to be taken over. As he soon realizes, this will mean sacking about 80 employees, as his boss Hugo Paradis knew from the start. However, his Paris girl friend reproaches him collaborating with ruthless capitalism, as if any of the downsizing could be stopped or mitigated by him bowing out. Nevertheless, as he gets to knew the threatened staff better he considers risking his career when his boss orders him to chose who should go. Meanwhile the factory staff starts realizing what’s about to happening

Contact: Antoine Sebire frenchcinemawashington@yahoo.com Audiovisual Affairs Embassy of France – La Maison Française 4101 Reservoir Road, NW Washington DC, 20007 Ph: 202.944.6287 Fax: 202.944.6043 http://www.la-maison-francaise.org