Barbara Kopple's incredible film traces the effects of a strike on 180 coal-mining families. This acclaimed documentary was selected for permanent preservation by the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 1990.
New York Times, 01/24/1977, p.18, "...A fascinating and moving work....Extraordinary intimacy..."
Release Note
DVD Features:
2-Disc Set Widescreen - 1.78 Audio: Mono - English Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary - 1. Barbara Kopple and Nancy Baker - Director, Editor Bonus Featurette - 1. The Making of HARLAN COUNTY USA Bonus Footage - 1. Outtakes 2. Panel Discussion from 2005 Sundance feat. Barbara Kopple and Roger Ebert Interview - 1. Hazel Dickens - Bluegrass singer-songwriter 2. Director John Sayles Trailer - 1. Theatrical Trailer Text/Photo Galleries: Text - 1. Essays by film scholar Paul Arthur and music journalist Jon Weisberger
DVD Features:
2-Disc Set Full Frame - 1.33 Widescreen - 1.78 Audio: Mono - English Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary: Barbara Kopple and Nancy Baker - Director, Editor Featurette: The Making of HARLAN COUNTY USA Trailers: Theatrical Trailer Interviews: 1. Hazel Dickens - Bluegrass singer-songwriter 2. Director John Sayles Bonus Footage: 1. Outtakes 2. Panel Discussion from 2005 Sundance feat. Barbara Kopple and Roger Ebert Text/Photo Galleries: Additional Text: Essays by film scholar Paul Arthur and music journalist Jon Weisberger
Product Notes
If Barbara Kopple had made no other film than this documentary account of the 1974 strike of Kentucky mine workers, arguably one of the finest documentaries ever made in the U.S. and possibly the best on the problems of organized labor, her place in film history would be assured. The strike began when the miners working for the Eastover Mining Co. joined the UMW, and its corporate parent, Duke Power, refused to sign the standard union contract. By living with the 180-odd families involved in the strike, Kopple shows the backbreaking burdens of the miners' life in the best of times and the looming fear of destitution in the worst. As the strikers strive to remain united through a difficult year, Kopple photographs the picketing, the company's use of state troopers to keep the roads open for scabs, the showdowns between the miners and strikebreakers brandishing firearms. After several shootings, one miner is finally killed. During the man's wake, a memorable sequence, his mother collapses. While the film is unabashedly partisan, it's worth remembering that the company's refusal to sign a contract was condemned by the National Labor Relations Board and that the corporation agreed to sign only under heavy pressure from federal mediators. The Oscar-winning HARLAN COUNTY, USA is a landmark in the history of American documentary filmmaking.
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