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Category Archives: Strikes-Strikebreaking-Lockouts

A bientôt j’espère: Be Seeing You (1968)

38m; Franc9

Director: Mario Marret and Chris Marker

Synopsis: From 1967 to 1976 Chris Marker was a member of SLON (the “Company for the Launching of New Works”). One of several groups that emerged in those years in which filmmakers, militants, and others came together on a cooperative, parallel basis, SLON was based on the idea that cinema should not be thought of solely in terms of commerce. 1967 was also the year an important strike broke out at Rhodiaceta, a textile plant owned by the Rhone-Poulenc trust in the city of Besançon, France. The strike was unusual in character because the workers refused to disassociate the industrial conflict from a social and cultural agenda. The workers’ demands concerned not only salary and job security, but also the very lifestyle imposed on them by society. So it was only natural that Chris Marker, along with other technicians and members of SLON, would visit Besançon to document the strike, and the lives and attitudes of the workers. The film’s most important moments are composed of conversations with workers and their wives. They believe the working class is increasingly at the mercy of a system that gives them no power, a system that would like them to remain powerless. And so it was that their local demands grew into questions about the larger political system. The strikers eventually returned to work with few gains, but had developed a sense of their power, which helped lay the groundwork for May ’68, when France was rocked by revolutionary protests.

Contact: http://icarusfilms.com/new2003/bien.html

 

 

I’m Alright Jack (1959)

105m; U.K.

Director: John Boulting

Cast:  Ian Carmichael, Terry-Thomas and Peter Sellers

Synopsis: A naive aristocrat in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labour union.

 

I’m on Strike Because (2006)

21m; U.S.

Director: Steve Fletcher

Synopsis: Behind the scenes at the NYU Graduate Student Strike.

Contact: fletch@nyu.edu

 

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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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.

 

The Globalization Tapes (2002)

85m

Director: Vision Machine Film Project

Synopsis: The film powerfully documents workers exploration of history, globalization, and how unions around the world can support each other and struggle together.

 

Granito de Arena (2005)

Mexico

Director: Jill Freidberg

Synopsis: Resistance to attacks on public education in Mexico as result of globalization.

 

Golden Lands, Working Hands

150m; U.S.
Synopsis: California labor history
http://www.cft.org/member-services/labor-education/golden-lands,-working-hands.html

Contact:  Golden Lands, Working Hands, CFT, One Kaiser Plaza, Suite 1440, Oakland, CA 94612, 510/832-8812, or email . Visit the Golden Lands, Working Hands page in the CFT website, http://www.cft.org.
Fred Glass, Communications Director California Federation of Teachers One Kaiser Plaza, Suite 1440 Oakland, CA 94612 510/832-882 fax 510/832-5044
http://www.cft.org

 

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From Wharf Rats to Lords of the Docks (2006)

U.S.

Director: Haskell Wexler

Synopsis: A filmed version of a Ian Ruskin’s one man-play covering the life of International Longshoreman and Warehouse Union founder and labor radical Harry Bridges.

Contact: Ian Ruskin, theharrybridgesproject@comcast.net; http://www.theharrybridgesproject.org

 

Haiti’s Tourniquet (2008)

19m; U.S.

Director: Diane Krauthamer

Synopsis: The Confederation of Haitian Workers (CTH) invited an Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) delegation to Haiti to learn about their fight against “le plan neoliberal” and recruit help in the form of material aid and solidarity. The delegation was in Haiti April 24 to May 5 2008, two weeks after the country erupted in mass protest at burgeoning food prices. This video shares the stories and experiences