Cheap Harlan County, USA (Video) (Barbara Kopple) Price
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| CATEGORY: | Video |
| DIRECTOR: | Barbara Kopple |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 1976 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Columbia Tristar Hom |
| MPAA RATING: | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| FEATURES: | Color, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Documentary |
| MEDIA: | VHS Tape |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 043396600119 |
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Customer Reviews of Harlan County, USA
Brookside, Coal Strike I was born and raised in Brookside, Ky. Many of the people in the film, I grew up with.My father and their fathers were hard core Union men. *Harlan,County USA* could not touch the blood that was shed previously to the 1973 Eastover, mine strike.The film glossed over,the miners and focused to much attention on the roll women played.Fighting with sticks and switches.In the 1930s Machines guns were the miners choice against scabs and gun thugs.The film with all its historical content,will find its place in history.A good film for people who are not familar with the true conditions of life in Harlan, County.
Not just a strike against the Coal Operators
Not only does Ms. Kopple's work bring to the table the injustice, served daily, in Harlan, but also displays to the viewer the inner politics of powerful, present-day unions. This film should be required viewing for every Rank and File member of a Union. It should also be required viewing for all management and salaried employees. The management will say, "Good thing I got my degree and I'm not down in the hole with those redneck miners. Haw-Haw-Haw!"
The Salaried Employees will respond: I hate my job, I hate my boss, if I could kill everyone in this office, I would; NO---- Not my boss, "like the Nazis", he's only following orders. Not my co-workers---They're only doing their job and trying to lead a healthy life.
Whom then? Who do we crucify? In every management situation there is an overseer and a slave, in every salaried position, there is an overseer and a slave, AND in every rank and file position there is an overseer and slaves.
Rank and File, Unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains, held by your big union and management Overseers!
Jason
One of the best documentaries I've ever viewed...
When I told the librarian I wanted to see a video on coal mining, she handed me "Harlan County." I looked at the date - which indicated that the coal miners' strike featured in the movie took place in the early 1970s and I handed it back to her saying, "No, I'm interested in something with more history in it."
A few days later, I felt impelled to return to the library and get this VHS. I sat down to watch it one morning and could not turn it off. It's compelling, intriguing, educational and emotional. I cried several times, watching the struggle and learning more and more about a coal miner's life.
For the last few months, I've been doing research (in preparation for a book on Sears Homes) about Standard Oil's coal mines in Macoupin County, Illinois in the 1920s. "Harlan County" showed archival footage and presented information that showed what a miner's life looked like - through the ages. Duke Power's coal mines in Harlan County, Kentucky were so backwards and Standard Oil's coal mines in Macoupin County, Illinois were so progressive, that I learned more than I ever expected about early 1900s mining techniques.
The story about the man and the mules is something I'll never ever forget. Or the miner's conversation with the New York policeman. Thank God for the director Ms. Koppel, who was inspired to create this documentary! And for her having the wisdom and foresight to record these old miners' reminiscences of life in the coal mines in the early years of the 20th Century.
Suddenly, all the puzzle pieces from my months of book reading and research came together when I saw these old films and heard the miners talk.
I'll be watching it again and again - with my family, too. And I hope every person who uses electricity in this country will watch it, too.
An interesting aside - in the 1920s in Macoupin County, Illinois, one coal miner died (on average) for every 279,000 tons of coal that was mined. Between 1900-1969, 100,000 miners died in this country. Standard Oil's mines (operated from 1918-1925) in Macoupin County may have been the safest mines in the country, but several men died in those mines, too.
In 1918, Standard Oil of Indiana built 192 Sears Modern Homes for their (mostly immigrant) miners in Macoupin County. (The term "Modern Homes" simply meant that the houses had kitchens, bathrooms, running water, central heat and electricity.)
In 1973, Duke Power's miners in Harlan County were still living in shacks with no running water.
Rose Thornton