RSS

Category Archives: Themes

Intel inside – Where? (2005)

60m; Israel

Director: Ayelet Bargur

Synopsis: What happens when globalization — in the form of high-tech giant Intel — comes to a small, remote community in southern Israel?

Contact: Ayelet Bargur, eyelet6@013.net 971-3-6041225; 972-52-2204734

 

Beynelmilel/”The International” (2006)

106m; Turkey

Director: Muharrem Gulmez & Sirri Sureyya Onder

Cast: Cezmi Baskin, Özgü Namal and Umut Kurt

Synopsis: One of the most popular films in Turkey about military rule and resistance.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Comedy, Drama, Politics, Working Class

 

Intolerance (1916)

163m; U.S.

Director: D.W. Griffith

Synopsis (IMDB): The story of a poor young woman, separated by prejudice from her husband and baby, is interwoven with tales of intolerance from throughout history.

 

Invisible Hand: the deindustrialization of southern Illinois

28m; U.S.

Director: Greg Boozell

Synopsis: Industrial workers caught up in globalization.

 

Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers (2006)

75m; U.S.

Director: Robert Greenwald

Synopsis (IMDB): Documentary portraying the actions of U.S. corporate contractors in the U.S.-Iraq war. Interviews with employees and former employees of such companies as Halliburton, CACI, and KBR suggest that government cronyism is behind apparent “sweetheart” deals that give such contractors enormous freedom to profit from supplying support and material to American troops while providing little oversight. Survivors of employees who were killed discuss the claim that the companies cared more for profit than for the welfare of their own workers, and soldiers indicate that the quality of services provided is sub-standard and severely in contradiction to the comparatively huge profits being generated. Also depicted are the unsuccessful attempts by the filmmakers to get company spokesmen to respond to the charges made by the interviewees.

 
 

Iron Ladies (2000)

30m; U.S.

Director: Kennedy Wheatley

Synopsis (Filmmakers Library): The Los Angeles Ironworkers union has 3,000 men and eight women. The apprenticeship program is rigorous; only 30% make it through the three-year training. In this documentary, veteran women ironworkers tell stories of surviving as the only female working on a construction site.

 

Iron Maze (1991)

104m; U.S.

Director: Hiroaki Yoshida

Cast: Jeff Fahey, Bridget Fonda and Hiroaki Murakami

Synopsis (IMDB): In Corinth, a dying town 15 miles from Pittsburg: One evening, a Japanese businessman, who wanted to tear down the closed iron mills to build an amusement park, is found half dead in his mill. Bellboy Barry admits to have done it – in self defense. Chief Ruhle interrogates him and Sugito’s young wife and business partners, but it takes a while, until he gets through the maze of apparently contradictory statements.

 

Ironeaters

85m; Bangladesh

Director: Shaheen Dill-Riaz

Synopsis: The Ironeaters is a beautiful film about the workers in the ship dismantling industry. This industry, which now employs three million workers has replaced the jute textile industry which was destroyed by the IMF and World Bank in order to eliminate competition to the international chemical companies. The workers in the Ironeaters face a brutal exploitation at 70 cents a day, and deadly health and safety conditions, which destroy their bodies and their lives. This non-union industry, with contractors pushing the workers to get the job done regardless of the costs, and they are deadly as they disfigure many of the workers. The systemic poverty used by the contractors drives these workers to desperation. This is the first film to show the workers in this industry and the work they do as “the rope carriers go home without a penny of wages.”

Contact: info@lemmefilm.de

 

Home Safe Hamilton (2010)

86m; Canada

Director: Laura Sky

Synopsis: Examines the threat of homelessness facing steelworker families, newcomers, youth and aboriginal families.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 9, 2012 in Documentary, Working Class

 

Home Safe Toronto (2009)

96m; Canada

Director: Laura Sky

Synopsis: Examines the threat and reality of homelessness facing the working poor, in the context of economic and job insecurity that has eroded the manufacturing sector.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 9, 2012 in Documentary, Working Class