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Category Archives: Themes

In the Company’s Hands (1987)

58m; U.S.

Director: Jack Kelly

Cast: Michael Martin

Synopsis: Jack Kelly directed, wrote and produced this comprehensive documentary about the Southern WV coal mine wars. It is narrated by Kelly and local actor Michael Martin who also acts in some of the recreations. Using archival footage, photographs, and historic songs, Kelly recreates the world of coal mining in the area. He interviews the descendants of people on both sides – the children of coal mine owners and the children of coal miners. Some of the people interviewed include black coal miner Sug Hawkins, Cecil Roberts (not UMWA president), and William Becker. The nephew of Tom Felts of the Baldwin-Felts Agency and a son of an owner are also interviewed. The film goes back to the first days of coal mining in WV, which started in 1871 in the New River area near Beckley. By 1896, 26 million tons of coal from the Pocahontas Field was being shipped all over the country to power the developing industrial age. 14 millionaires lived in Brawell. Around 1900 many miners from Europe were brought to the coal fields, segregated in their own sections of the company towns. 80 % of all coal in WV was mined in company towns. The coal mine owners felt they had a divine right to do whatever was necessary to build their companies in “the wilderness.” Most of the film focuses on the struggle between miners and the oppressive reality of life in company towns where all behavior was closely controlled by the miner owners. Key events such as The Matewan Massacre and The Battle of Blair Mountain are analyzed. Dr. Fred Barkey, a well-known WV labor historian, and industry historian Dr. C. Stuart McGehee provided the historical information. Executive producer Donn Rogosin, station manager of WSWP-TV.

 

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Inch’Allah Dimanche (Thank God its Sunday) (2001)

98m; France

Director: Yamina Benguigi

Synopsis (New York Times): The abused and oppressed wife of an Algerian immigrant begins standing up for herself in a film by Yamina Benguigui.

http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/259507/Inch-Allah-Dimanche/overview

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Drama, Immigrants/Immigration

 

Indentured (2010)

10m; U.S./Iraq

Director: Cy Kuckenbaker

Synopsis: “Indentured” investigates the living conditions of South Asian laborers working on US military bases in Iraq. Thousands of nameless workers, called “Third Country Nationals” because they’re neither American nor Iraqi, toil inside US bases in Iraq as food servers, custodians, construction workers and more. But unlike American contractors who often make six figure salaries in Iraq, these men typically make less than two dollars an hour. Nepalese custodians talk about the illegal broker’s fees they had to pay to get their jobs on the base. Inside a company-run camp a Nepalese supervisor explains how they are brought into Iraq against Nepalese and Iraqi law.

 

The Industrial City (1970)

16m; U.S.

Director: Encyclopedia Brittanica Educational Corporation

Synopsis: Study of Detroit as an automotive industrial city.

 

The Industrial Workers (1970)

16m; U.S.

Director: Encyclopedia Brittanica Educational Corporation

Synopsis: An analysis of some of the implications of automation in a mass-production factory. The film points out that automation can free the worker but it poses a challenge to retrain and adjust to changing circumstances.

 

The Inheritance (1964)

58m; U.S.

Director: Harold Mayer and Lynne Rhodes Mayer

Synopsis: The Inheritance shows what life was really like for immigrants and working Americans from the turn of the century through the fight for civil rights in the 1960s. This stirring history of our country shows their struggle to put down roots, form labor unions, survive wars, and finally, create a new and better life for themselves and our nation.

Our film explores a landscape largely unknown to the present generation—the dim sweatshops, coal mines and textile mills filled with children; the anxious years of the depression and labor’s bloody struggle for the right to organize; the battlefields of WW I and II; the seldom seen newsreel footage of the Memorial Day massacre at The Republic Steel strike in Chicago; the civil rights struggle— as every generation fights again to preserve and extend its freedoms. This is the film’s theme.

Contact: The film is available in 4 parts on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWDPHQX0S0w

Harold Mayer and Lynne Rhodes Mayer

Harold Mayer Productions

New Milford, CT

 

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Injustice (2003)

20m; Colombia

Director: Juan Alonso Mejia and Juan Bernardo Rosado

Synopsis: Workers in Colombia organize

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Documentary, Organizing

 

Inner City Dweller: Work (1972)

19m; U.S.

Synopsis: Dramatizes, through a single case study, a structure and function of job training programs in urban minority areas. Follows the partial success of George, an unemployed black man, who turns to job training to support his family. Focuses on George’s success at finding a good job because of his training and the dilemma he faces when he is laid off.

Contact: Film is available to be streamed here: http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/vss/view.do?videoId=VAC2537

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Blacks, Documentary, Working Class

 

Innocent Until Proven Guilty (1999)

Director: Kirsten Johnson

Synopsis: ” Feature-length documentary about the juvenile justice system in Washington D.C.”

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Documentary, Legal System

 

Inside Detroit (1956)

82m; 

Director: Fred F. Sears

Synopsis: autoworkers.