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Category Archives: Documentary

They Were Not Silent: The Jewish Labor Movement and the Holocaust (1998)

30m; U.S.

Director: Roland Millman

Synopsis (Wikipedia): They Were Not Silent is a documentary about the Jewish Labor Committee’s anti-Nazi movement in America before, during and after World War II. The film features rare archival footage and photographs along with interviews with labor veterans, Holocaust survivors and scholars. It explores how international Jewry worked to help Jews and non-Jews in Germany, Poland, and elsewhere in Europe.

Contact: Gail Malmgreen 212-998-2636 gail.malmgreen@nyu.edu

 

Thirst (2004)

62m; U.S.

Director: Alan Snitow and Deborah Kaufman

Synopsis: Community resistance to water privatization, union-community coalitions, public employees, need for public investment in infrastructure.

Contact: Alan Snitow & Deborah Kaufman Snitow-Kaufman Productions 2600 Tenth Street #603 Berkeley, CA 94710 510 841-1068 amsnitow@igc.org http://www.snitow-kaufman.org

 
 

This Is Just The Start (2009)

4m; U.K.

Director: Gary Williams

Synopsis: On 10th October 2009, UNISON organizers met with Chartwell’s (Compass Group plc) Sheffield City school catering staff with the aim of starting to get organized and win their proper pay and conditions.

Contact: G.Williams@unison.co.uk

 

Thurmond, West Virginia (1996)

22m; U.S.

Director: Laura Harrison

Synopsis: This films documents the falling fortunes of Thurmond, a coal town. Thurmond was once a thriving community, yet today it stands as a ghost town in the making. It was also the main filming location for John Sayles’ film “Matewan.”  This film, directed by Laura Harrison, looks at the history the town, while subtly probing deeper issues about the importance of community and the identity of a place.

 

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Tillie Olsen: A Heart In Action (2006)

30m; U.S.

Director: Ann Hershey

Synopsis: Shows the explosive experiences of writer and activist Tillie Olsen in her youth that helped form her views.

Contact: http://www.laborfest.net/2006schedule.htm

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Documentary, Labor History, Women

 

Time Goes By: 57th St. & MacCorkle Ave. North 1921-2007

2007 35 mins. Joe Hodges

A second glass plant existed right across the street from LOF on MacCorkle Ave. SE in the Kanawha City section of Charleston. This plant became the largest producer of glass bottles in the world by the 1930s. In 1917, just one year after the LOF plant was founded, the Owens-Illinois Company began manufacturing fruit jars, jars for industrial products, and after Prohibition ended, beer bottles. This film tells the story of WV native son Michael Joseph Owens, the inventor of the bottle-making machine that revolutionized the glass industry worldwide. Photos of workers are shown, and videotape-showing reunions are included. The plant closed in 1963. Many workers at this plant would walk across the street and work at the LOF plant when things were slow.

Access: Joseph D. Hodges, 5426 Lancaster Ave. SE, Charleston, WV 25304, 925-1819, joe1819@suddenlink.net or David Radford, 2950 Pine St., Belle, WV, 595-1090. The WV State Archives has copies of both films LOF and OI films, made available to reseachers. Copies of both LOF and OI glass factory films should be available from WVLC and KCPL in summer 2009.

 

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Documentary, Manufacturing

 

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Time to Tackle Climate Change (2010)

20m

Synopsis: Showcases trade unions´ concrete experiences, challenges, opportunities, and commitments for action on climate change and features contributions from over 45 trade union organizations from all over the world. Unions´messages for action highlight that the environment, employment, social justice and a just transition are all part of the same fight.

Contact: Julianna Angelova Sustainlabour International Labour Foundation for Sustainable Development Fundación Internacional Laboral para el Desarrollo Sostenible C/ Pedro Teixeira, 3 1ºC 28020 Madrid, SPAIN Tel: +34 91 4491045 jangelova@sustainlabour.

 
 

To Save the Land and the People (1999)

59m; U.S.

Director: Anne Lewis

Synopsis: Strip or “surface” mining – where coal is blasted and scraped from the mountain surface – increased dramatically in the Appalachian region in 1961 when the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) signed contracts to buy over 16 million tons of strip-mined coal. Though cheaper for the buyer than deep-mined coal, the damage done by strip mining was far reaching and had immediate impact on coalfield residents. To Save the Land and People is a history of the early grassroots efforts to stop strip mining in eastern Kentucky, where “broad form” deeds, signed at the beginning of the 20th Century, were used by coal operators to destroy the surface land without permission or compensation of the surface owner. The program focuses on the Appalachian Group to Save the Land and People, whose members used every means possible – from legal petitions and local ordinances, to guns and dynamite – to fight strip mining. The documentary makes a powerful statement about the land and how we use it, and how its misuse conflicts with local cultures and values.

Contact: Anne Lewis 512-656-0507 (cell) http://www.annelewis.org

 
 

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To The Bitter End

58m; South Korea

Director: Jun-sik

Synopsis: Korean workers fight Worker Dispatch Law

 
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Posted by on June 13, 2012 in Documentary, Organizing, Politics

 

To The Workers of The World (2002)

4m; U.S.

Director: Tammy Gold

Synopsis: Tribute to workers who died at World Trade Towers in 2001.

Contact: 212-772-4953; tgold@hunter.cuny.edu tamigold@mindspring.com