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Category Archives: Working Class

American Madness (1932)

75m; U.S.

Director: Frank Capra

Cast: Walter Huston

Synopsis: For twenty-five years, Tom Dickson, the President of Union National Bank, has had the bank, its employees and its clients in his best interest. In turn, his employees and the bank’s clients are fiercely loyal to Tom and the bank. The bank’s Board of Directors have a different view. They accuse Tom of being reckless, especially in being overly liberal in approving what they consider questionable loans. Tom defends his loan policy, stating that money in circulation is what is needed to help the country get out of the depression. The Board will do whatever it needs to to remove Tom from his position. When the bank is robbed of $200,000, one of Tom’s most loyal employees, Matt Brown, the newly appointed assistant head cashier, is implicated as the thief, although Tom believes Matt is innocent

 
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Posted by on January 24, 2012 in Drama, Finance, Working Class

 

American Romance (1944)

122m; U.S.

Director: King Vidor

Synopsis: Immigrant iron worker winds up owning his own company.

 

And Women Must Weep (1962)

26m; U.S.

Director: National Right to Work Committee

Synopsis: Anti-union film dramatizing a wildcat strike staged by the IAM in Princeton, Indiana in 1956-57.

 

Andalucia (2007)

94m; France

Director: Alain Gomis

Cast: Samir Guesmi, Delphine Zingg, Djolof Mbengue, Bass Dhem, Axel Bogousslavsky, Marc Martínez

Synopsis: Algerian man moves to Paris and deals with issues of class, employment, immigration, and poverty.

Contact: 1001 Productions: 44, boulevard Magenta 75010 Paris, Téléphone : (33) 1 47 70 44 70, Fax : (33) 1 40 18 42 49; Email : milleetune@free.fr claude nouchi: claude.colifilms@club-internet.fr 1001 Productions http://www.1001productions.

 

Angadi Theru (2010)

148m; India

Director: Vasanthabalan

Synopsis: Jyothi Lingam (Mahesh) is a bright student and son of a mason who leads a happy life in his village near Tirunelveli. One day tragedy strikes as his father the only earning member dies in an accident while crossing an unmanned railway gate and the young boy now has to look after his mother and two sisters. Mahesh, along with hundreds of others, works at the Senthil Murugan Stores run by the big Annachi where 50 to 60 sales boys and girls work in pitiable conditions from early in the morning to late at night, without any rest. He meets Kani (Anjali), a fiery, independent girl. Angadi Theru is about how these two survive in concentration camp-like conditions and what happens when fate smiles cruelly at them. This film is considered to be a milestone in Tamil cinema due its raw content.

 
 

The Angry Silence (1960)

95m; U.K.

Director: Guy Green

Synopsis: Scab workers in England. No one will talk to the protagnist who is anti-labor and will not walk out with the rest.

 

Arsenal (1928)

70m; U.S.S.R.

Director: Alexander Dovzhenko

Synopsis: Based on an actual incident, this is a dramatic account of the Ukraine from the First World War through the February and October Revolutions, to the suppression of a workers’ revolt in 1918. Dovzhenko presents harsh, realistic scenes of Czarist brutality and war’s destruction, but his juxtapositions of the Russian workers and peasants are both impressionistic and symbolic.

 
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Posted by on January 24, 2012 in Working Class

 

At Home in Utopia (2008)

133m; U.S.

Director: Michal Goldman

Synopsis (IMDB): During the economic boom of the 1920s, thousands of immigrant Jewish factory workers managed to build the house of their dreams, a cooperative apartment complex at the edge of Bronx Park. Then they were hit by the Great Depression. At Home in Utopia bears witness to an epic social experiment across two generations in the Coops – a place known as “little Moscow” – where people tried to change the American dream into one that included racial justice and workers’ rights.

Contact: Michal Goldman Michalman@aol.com Filmmakers Collaborative 397 Moody Street Waltham MA 02453 T 781 647-1102 F 781 647-1140

 

The Awful Truth (1999-2000)

24 episodes; U.S.

Director: Michael Moore

Synopsis: Activist film director Micheal Moore hosts a show where he continues his crusade to expose wrongdoing by the high and mighty.

 

Backyard / El traspatio (2009)

122m; Mexico

Director: Carlos Carrera

Synopsis: The true story of the border town of Juarez, Mexico where since the mid-90’s thousands of women have gone missing or turned up as sun-burnt corpses in the desert. Can new police captain Blanca Bravo stop the savagery?

 
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Posted by on January 24, 2012 in Drama, Whistleblowers, Women, Working Class