Directed by Deborah Shaffer and Stewart Bird
USA | 1979 | Documentary | 89 min | English
Film Source: Kino Lorber
Sponsored by: Greg Guma
Please note the virtual ticket for this film is only viewable in Vermont.
Founded in Chicago in 1905, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) took to organizing unskilled workers into one big union and changed the course of American history. This compelling documentary of the IWW (or “The Wobblies” as they were known) tells the story of workers in factories, sawmills, wheat fields, forests, mines, and on the docks as they organize and demand better wages, healthcare, overtime pay, and safer working conditions. In some respects, men and women, Black and white, skilled and unskilled workers joining a union and speaking their minds seems so long ago, but in other ways, the film mirrors today’s headlines, depicting a nation ravaged by corporate greed. In this recently restored documentary from 1979, filmmakers Deborah Shaffer and Stewart Bird weave history, archival film footage, interviews with former workers (then in their 80s and 90s), cartoons, original art, and classic Wobbly songs (many written by Joe Hill) to pay tribute to the legacy of these rebels who paved the way and risked their lives for many of the rights that we still have today.
Restored by the Museum of Modern Art and recently inducted into the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress.
***Followed by an in-person Q&A with director Deborah Shaffer***