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Harlan County U.S.A.

  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Harlan County U.S.A. (1976)
A heartbreaking record of the thirteen-month struggle between a community fighting to survive and a corporation dedicated to the bottom line.
Play trailer3:02
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Documentary

A heartbreaking record of the thirteen-month struggle between a community fighting to survive and a corporation dedicated to the bottom line.A heartbreaking record of the thirteen-month struggle between a community fighting to survive and a corporation dedicated to the bottom line.A heartbreaking record of the thirteen-month struggle between a community fighting to survive and a corporation dedicated to the bottom line.

  • Director
    • Barbara Kopple
  • Stars
    • John L. Lewis
    • Carl Horn
    • Norman Yarborough
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Barbara Kopple
    • Stars
      • John L. Lewis
      • Carl Horn
      • Norman Yarborough
    • 67User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 9 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

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    Photos34

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    Top cast58

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    John L. Lewis
    John L. Lewis
    • Self - Pres., UMW, 1920-1960
    • (archive footage)
    Carl Horn
    • Self - Pres., Duke Power Co.
    Norman Yarborough
    • Self - Pres., Eastover Mining Co. (Owned by Duke Power)
    Logan Patterson
    • Self - Chief Negotiator
    Houston Elmore
    • Self - UMW Organizer
    Phil Sparks
    • Self - UMW Staff
    John Corcoran
    • Self - Pres., Consolidated Coal
    John O'Leary
    • Self - Former Dir., Bureau of Mines
    Donald Rasmussen
    • Self - Black Ling Clinic., W. Va
    • (as Dr. Donald Rasmussen)
    Hawley Wells Jr.
    • Self
    • (as Dr. Hawley Wells Jr.)
    W.A. 'Tony' Boyle
    • Self - Pres., UMW, 1962-1972
    • (archive footage)
    Joseph Yablonski
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    • (as Joseph "Jock" Yablonski)
    Chip Yablonski
    • Self
    Ken Yablonski
    • Self
    Arnold Miller
    • Self - Miners for Democracy Candidate
    Florence Reece
    • Self
    Bazel Collins
    • Self - Mine Foreman
    • (as Basil Collins)
    Sudie Crusenberry
    • Self
    • Director
      • Barbara Kopple
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    8.27.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Benedict_Cumberbatch

    'There's blood upon your contract like vinegar in your wine...

    ...'cause there's one man dead on the Harlan County line'.

    This is a powerful Oscar-winning documentary produced and directed by Barbara Kopple ('American Dream', 'Wild Man Blues'). It focuses on the men at the Brookside Mine in Harlan, Kentucky who, in the summer of 1973, voted to join the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA). Duke Power Company and its subsidiary, Eastover Mining Company, refused to sign the contract. The miners came out on a long strike, registered by Kopple with testimonies, backstories, archival footage, and music, particularly that of Hazel Dickens during the final credits.

    The film's main strength resides in the sincerity of its emotional, political and sociological core without being overtly sentimental, and Kopple's way of testifying instead of exploiting the subjects. The miners and their wives are not depicted in old hillbilly stereotypes, but rather as hard-working human beings fighting for their basic rights ('together we stand, divided we fall').

    Thirty years after the release of this documentary, five miners died in an explosion at Harlan County. When the film was shot, money was the bigger issue (industry profits rose 170% in 1975, but miner's wages rose only 4%); nowadays, however, safety is an even bigger issue. You'd think things would have been largely improved since then, but that's not really the case. 'Harlan County U.S.A.' is a remarkable documentary because it testifies and proposes solutions about a public struggle that shouldn't be overlooked, yet has been for such a long time, in the "land of the free and home of the brave".
    7Jeremy_Urquhart

    Seems regrettably timeless

    This is a movie about a coal miner's strike in the 1970s. No reason I'm watching this today... no sir, no reason at all.

    I guess it just goes to show how struggles with the cost of living aren't anything new, and this documentary does a great job of dispelling the idea that everyday people are greedy and want excessive amounts of money. I think most people are underpaid, and people just want the kind of compensation that will lower the stress of life. Bosses and people in charge always seem to hoard money. If this is the way things have to be run, then people who do hard work (and a lot of it) should be appropriately compensated. It's just a shame that some people view protests like this as radical or excessive, and I think a documentary like Harlan County USA could help change minds and attitudes.

    Look, it's overall a very good documentary. The simple, natural style works. It's persuasive. Unions are good. I can't fault this stuff.

    But this genuinely has one of the worst soundtracks I've ever heard, so uh, I'm sorry... points off for that (the god-awful music just never stops either).
    emma502

    A gripping reality that still exists in America.

    Dirt roads, no plumbing, wages lower than the standard living condition rates, abused mentally and physically by a large monopolistic corporation, and a lack of a full education are all factors that led to the strike of the minors in Harlan County. A county that time as well as the nation forgot. A county that did not progressed on beyond the persecution and disgraceful treatment of the 1930's proletariat. A county where the average man lived in constant fear that there would not be a constant and or adequate income; where the only way to see change was to unite and to revolt by any means to force people to see the intolerable conditions that they live in.

    This documentary was filmed over a period of 4 years which in turn showed the lack of speed for a change from a peon work ethic to one of equality. The men of the mine saw the results that a union in other parts of the country and the standard of living that most Americans enjoyed as compared to their own situation. The community of Harlan County had a desire for change from an almost forced labor to one where the worker could make choices, have health care and to not live from pay check to pay check. The men and the woman were willing to risk everything for a better future for their children. The wives of the minors not only lived in the same conditions but had the same drive for changes and a difference. The women not only increased the numbers for picket lines but they also brought the importance of the strike to an `at home' feel. The rough terrain, harsh living community, and dirty, dingy way of life that a miner and a miner's family lived in was adequately represented in the film via the raw nature of the interviews and the in the field live spontaneous coverage. You as the viewer did not sit back and watch the film but instead were brought in to the lives of these men and woman. The filming brought a sense to the audience that you were there on the picket line, you felt the terror of being attacked, and you experienced the chaos when shots were fired at unarmed citizens. The falling of the camera and the blackness of the shot exemplifies the nature of not understanding what was going on at that moment. This in your face type of filming also show all aspects of what a strike of this nature entails. The viewer saw the aftermath and hospitalization of the battles between unarmed men and the `gun -thugs' sent to end picket lines. Like Bordwall and Thompson state the film crew used was small and more mobile, this not only rejected the traditional ideals of script and structure but also allowed the film makers to almost disappear into the back ground and let the action unfold in font of their eyes. This form of filming were there is a no holds bar or in your face tactic shows all portions of the incident, meaning that there is a feeling that the camera was never turned off. It brought light to a subject that most would not have known about, a subject that it profoundly influenced. The press that such documentaries bring to these hidden incidents carries a strong level of change and importance that otherwise would not be there. The filming of these events is intense. The film must express the telling of a complete story, one that ties the events that previously unfolded through the elapsed filming time to a coherent ending, being it either good or bad. The documentary film is a modern day form of passing on a lesson or an experience to a new audience, the modern day word of mouth story telling.
    10postmanwhoalwaysringstwice

    harlan sings the blues

    Barbara Kopple's 1976 documentary "Harlan County USA" remains one of the finest portraits of the struggle between faceless and greedy corporations and the employees who work themselves to the bone to eke out a living. The film deals with a coal miner's strike in a small Kentucky town during the early 70s. These seemingly insurmountable odds to strike up agreements between the company and the union in this Harlan County town dip back as far as a bloody battle there during the 1930s.

    The miners and the picketers are captured via a well-maintained cinema verite style to the point that much of the early dialogue in the film is indiscernible and lingers there only as a means to introduce the tone. Music plays a key role in the emotional impact of this gritty film as well. Considering it takes place in the Bluegrass State, it comes as no surprise that so many of the most intense moments in the film carry with them a heart-wrenching rendition of roots music, most of which pertain specifically to coal mining.

    "Harlan County USA" removes the presumptions that such human atrocities are far gone memories of America's past, and would pave the way for other important pro-workers rights films as "Norma Rae", "Silkwood", and "Matewan".
    dougdoepke

    As Relevant Now as It Was Then

    What this outstanding documentary shows is that the grassroots can supply their own leadership when struggling against uncaring employers. It's also a reminder of why unions were so instrumental in creating an American middle-class. As the movie shows, only militant collective action can lift working people from poverty in an economy where production is first and foremost for profit. These lessons are especially topical in our period now that wages have fallen drastically compared to productivity, and unions have been replaced by off- shoring.

    Sure the documentary's one-sided since it shows the vibrant Appalachin coal-mining community struggling in the face of the coal company, strike-breakers, and law-enforcement allies. After all, I guess competing footage would have to be from a company executive session where profits and power are discussed, not indoor plumbing and a living wage. Clearly, the topic sorts itself for the average viewer.

    Then there're the faces. You don't get life in the raw like this from a casting call on Hollywood and Vine. The men and women are indelible and a permanent record of the nation's real fabric. True, I don't have much ear for the down-home music that's such a strong narrative part, but I do have a new appreciation for what the artistry stands for. Thanks Barbara Koppel for going where movie-makers seldom go, and recording what many of us seldom see. Sure, that's been 40-years ago, but I dare say the lessons are as topical now as they were then. Maybe more so.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When filming began, the film was intended to be about the 1972 campaign by Arnold Miller and Miners For Democracy to unseat UMWA president Tony Boyle, in the aftermath of Joseph Yablonski's murder; however, the Harlan County strike began and caused the filmmakers to change their principal subject, with the campaign and murder becoming secondary subjects.
    • Quotes

      Hawley Wells Jr.: [...] that was when I learned my first real political lesson, about what happens when you take a position against the coal operators, against the capitalists... I found out that the union officials were working with the coal companies. I also found that the Catholic hierarchy was working with the coal companies. Here was a combination of the whole thing, you see: you had to bump against the whole combination of them.

    • Connections
      Featured in Cinéma Vérité: Defining the Moment (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Dark As A Dungeon
      Written by Merle Travis

      Sung by David Morris

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    • How long is Harlan County U.S.A.?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 28, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Criterion
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Harlan County, USA
    • Filming locations
      • Harlan, Kentucky, USA
    • Production company
      • Cabin Creek Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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