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Matewan

  • 1987
  • PG-13
  • 2h 15m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
9.9K
YOUR RATING
Matewan (1987)
A labor union organizer comes to an embattled mining community brutally and violently dominated and harassed by the mining company.
Play trailer1:40
1 Video
76 Photos
Period DramaPolitical DramaDramaHistory

A labor union organizer comes to an embattled mining community in 1920 West Virginia, brutally and violently dominated and harassed by the mining company.A labor union organizer comes to an embattled mining community in 1920 West Virginia, brutally and violently dominated and harassed by the mining company.A labor union organizer comes to an embattled mining community in 1920 West Virginia, brutally and violently dominated and harassed by the mining company.

  • Director
    • John Sayles
  • Writer
    • John Sayles
  • Stars
    • Chris Cooper
    • James Earl Jones
    • Mary McDonnell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    9.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Sayles
    • Writer
      • John Sayles
    • Stars
      • Chris Cooper
      • James Earl Jones
      • Mary McDonnell
    • 72User reviews
    • 37Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:40
    Official Trailer

    Photos76

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    Top cast55

    Edit
    Chris Cooper
    Chris Cooper
    • Joe Kenehan
    James Earl Jones
    James Earl Jones
    • Few Clothes Johnson
    Mary McDonnell
    Mary McDonnell
    • Elma Radnor
    Will Oldham
    Will Oldham
    • Danny Radnor
    David Strathairn
    David Strathairn
    • Sid Hatfield
    Ken Jenkins
    Ken Jenkins
    • Sephus Purcell
    Kevin Tighe
    Kevin Tighe
    • Bill Hickey
    Gordon Clapp
    Gordon Clapp
    • Tom Griggs
    Bob Gunton
    Bob Gunton
    • C.E. Lively
    Jace Alexander
    Jace Alexander
    • Hillard Elkins
    Joe Grifasi
    Joe Grifasi
    • Fausto
    Nancy Mette
    Nancy Mette
    • Bridey Mae
    Jo Henderson
    • Mrs. Elkins
    Josh Mostel
    Josh Mostel
    • Cabell Testerman
    Gary McCleery
    • Ludie
    Maggie Renzi
    Maggie Renzi
    • Rosaria
    Tom Wright
    Tom Wright
    • Tom
    Michael B. Preston
    • Ellix
    • (as Michael Preston)
    • Director
      • John Sayles
    • Writer
      • John Sayles
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews72

    7.99.9K
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    Featured reviews

    9babygeniusesvseightcrazynights

    A greatly under-appreciated classic

    This 1987 film aims to document real events that concerned a small coal mining community (called Matewan) in West Virginia in 1920. The miners are trying to organize a union, much to the dismay of the company that employs them. All of the acting is great, including, in the starring role, Chris Cooper, (the Kansas City native who was the abusive father from American Beauty and who starred in another fantastic Sayles film from 1996, Lonestar), David Strathairn as the good-natured but stern police chief, and, in his only theatrical movie role ever (here at 14 years old), indie-folk legend Will Oldham, of Palace Music and Bonnie Prince Billie fame. He plays a preacher-in-training in the film, and does such a great job that it seems damn unfortunate for all of us that he didn't continue his acting career--though he would go on to make some great music, and continues to currently. It also features James Earl Jones, aka Darth Vader.

    Anyway, the film is very honest, subtle and exquisite. You don't feel, as you do with many films churned out by Hollywood, that things have been altered and embellished for the sake of making it interesting--it's very natural, and it seems very real. You're confidant that Sayles is giving you the truth here, as best he can, through his visual style, restrained, natural dialogue and engaging historic atmosphere.

    It's movies like this that renew my faith in period pieces. Important historical films at their best are able to capture a period and bring the audience as close as possible to experiencing the 'feel' of that time--I guess that kinda goes without saying though.
    10sunsetcliff

    Powerful presentation of the struggle for human dignity and equity.

    This is a powerful film depicting both the conditions under which most mineworkers labored and the social conditions existing in the 1920-1930 era of our American history. It accurately portrays the manner in which powerful industrial interests manipulated the worker's economic dependency using 'script' issued in lieu of lawful and legal tender and controlled the acquisition of basic needs such as shelter, food, and clothing. By "owning" the stores, controlling employment, threatening the physical well-being of its employees, and hiring of thugs to intimidate individuals and their ability to implement any organized mutual assistance, these wealthy and powerful companies sought to (and succeeded in ) maximizing their profits by using the labor of the poor and impotent at almost no cost to the company.

    One needs to search intensely to finally reveal the true history of our period of industrialization. It is of great credit to the producer's and director's of such films as "Matewan" that we can see clearly the history and ongoing great struggle between the working class and the wealthy elite to obtain their proper share of "profits."

    This is a film where one enters a theater to be "entertained", but leaves having the stirrings of compassion and outrage raised in their hearts. It reminds us that there is a human price paid for economic gain.
    9bek-12

    Great movie about my hometown!

    If you are from Matewan, you know the shock of having this movie be about your hometown. I can't help but wonder if James Earl Jones was thinking "Why the hell are we making a movie about this place??" I think the population when I lived there (most of my life) was somewhere around 1200. Probably hasn't grown much. I still keep in contact with a few people from there. My dad owned a bar there called the Silver Dollar, and he worked in the mines at one time, as did my mother and grandfather. I've heard stories of how the real Matewan Massacre went, along with Bloody Mingo and all the rest, and from what I've heard from my family, this movie is pretty close to the truth. Matewan has always been a rough town, and even today fights are commonplace in this little one street town. It's pretty desolate, with no real business, no industry, and the coal mines are almost mined out. The nearest decent place is Williamson (WV) or Pikeville, Kentucky, a small college town. I miss home sometimes, but at least I can watch the movie and be reminded of home. One thing about it... it's an entertaining movie. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did, but then again, I'm biased.
    10Knuckle

    A stark depiction of a dark chapter in history

    Matewan tells the tale of just one of the battles fought in the coal mining wars of the late nineteenth, early twentieth century.

    Chris Cooper, as Joe Menehan, plays a union organizer intent upon bringing the miners of Matewan out from underneath the heel of the coal mine owners. When intimidation and terror tactics fail to cow the locals, the mine operators and their private security thugs bring in scabs, nominally led by "Few Clothes" Johnson - played by James Earl Jones. When the scabs join the strikers the mine operators resort to all-out warfare against the unionized miners.

    David Strathairn, Chris Cooper, James Earl Jones, Mary McDonnell - everyone on the cast delivers a believable, wonderful performance. Everything in this movie makes you feel as if you were really there and depicts this often overlooked event in American history with a stark realism that will leave you thinking about it over and over for a very long time.

    Such is the impact of the direction, acting, and writing of this movie that when I saw this movie on video about a week ago, it was still as fresh in my mind as when I saw it last on the big screen on opening day.

    10 out of 10. Truly an overlooked classic.
    chaos-rampant

    One of the great narratives of the 80's

    After a streak of Godard films that left me a little exhausted, I was looking for a big narrative to immerse myself in, a film where artifice does not jump to our attention but is transparent and the world of the film believable. I immediately remembered about John Sayles and his nouvellas of cinema. With Lone Star I bemoaned the lack of a visual imagination, but coming to a Sayles film for a narrative like I did with Matewan, I leave completely satisfied. The man excels in telling us stories with scope and values of importance.

    What a lovely world he creates here, among the derelict shacks and cabins of the Pennsylvania foothills of Matewan a moral struggle is fought, flawed characters with faces blackened by coaldust fumble with great ideals and big hopes for a better future, and the one thing that stands between them and justice is their own prejudice. I like how the film suggests that for the collective to be reformed the individual must be reformed first, that we need to look inwards first before we make a stand. The stand in the film is heroic but also desperate, a bit of a lawless old West on the way to emancipation. John Sayles is a leftist and this comes across loud and clear in Matewan, but unlike a Godard film like Week End, Sayles doesn't call for blood, he calls for social justice.

    The narrative here sprawls in and out of log cabins where sullen faces plot strikes and discuss ideals, in and out of makeshift tents and muddy town streets where coalminers live and die and sing, now a fiddle or harmonica is calling out from the dark the sad tune of a life of suffering, and the finale is sealed with a shootout filled with tragedy and hope. Sayles' camera doesn't intrude in any of this, rather it's invited in and hankers down out of way to quietly listen or conspire.

    Matewan makes a great doublebill with Martin Ritt's The Molly Maguires, another forlorn drama of the oppressed that speaks of moral devastation in the Pennsylvania coal fields, but more, it stands by itself as one of the great American narratives of the 80's.

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    Sacred Words - Making Matewan
    Sacred Words - Making Matewan

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The miners' union was broken by 1921, after President Warren G. Harding put the entire state of West Virginia under martial law and sent the army to the coalfields to defend the companies against their employees. By then, hundreds of miners had been killed, thousands arrested and jailed. It was not until 1935, under Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, that union organizing was legally protected in the United States.
    • Goofs
      Look for the sheriff to remove a gun from someone's hand (by holding the gun by the barrel) after it's been fired four or five times.
    • Quotes

      Joe Kenehan: You think this man is the enemy? Huh? This is a worker! Any union keeps this man out ain't a union, it's a goddam club! They got you fightin' white against colored, native against foreign, hollow against hollow, when you know there ain't but two sides in this world - them that work and them that don't. You work, they don't. That's all you get to know about the enemy.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Chuck Berry: Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll/Like Father Like Son/Baby Boom/Big Shots/Matewan (1987)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 28, 1987 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Мейтвон
    • Filming locations
      • Thurmond, West Virginia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Red Dog Films
      • Cinecom Entertainment Group
      • Film Gallery.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,680,358
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $23,850
      • Aug 30, 1987
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,680,358
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 15 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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