Harlan County USA (1976) - Making Of -

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  • Опубликовано: 29 дек 2024

Комментарии • 46

  • @colleenstack210
    @colleenstack210 5 лет назад +20

    This documentary humbled me speechless at times. Best documentary of all time.

  • @bryanburnap4537
    @bryanburnap4537 5 лет назад +13

    My favorite documentary of all time !!

  • @michaelmuldowney8
    @michaelmuldowney8 5 лет назад +19

    15:23 Still one of the most iconic images in all of 1970's cinema. The women in this movie are true superheroes.

    • @Utubin
      @Utubin 2 года назад

      I loved em.

    • @edmund184
      @edmund184 2 года назад

      but the women weren't going down the coal mines with the men were they?

    • @Utubin
      @Utubin 2 года назад +2

      @@edmund184
      True.
      But they stood by there men and what they thought was right.

    • @TrillaDilla410
      @TrillaDilla410 Год назад

      ​@@edmund184actually they were. Most women were fighting to go underground. The problem was when they got 3 miles under the mountain they would talk the men into doing their work.

  • @Polack-ml9fh
    @Polack-ml9fh 6 лет назад +33

    One of the greatest least talked about documentaries of all time. This wasn’t that long ago. The fight between workers and corporations still goes on today. Bottom line is the all mighty dollar. People need the right to stand up to the corporate greed... don’t be afraid.

    • @Utubin
      @Utubin 2 года назад +1

      100% agree.
      And what a great documentary.

    • @Itsa6stringthang
      @Itsa6stringthang 4 дня назад

      My grandmother was from Kentucky, she moved to Michigan and joined the U.A.W. she was a proud union member. I still remember her telling me that they were the only ones who would stand up for you and labor rights.

  • @KingRoper
    @KingRoper 4 года назад +8

    This should be required viewing after the film. Glad I found it, and glad I'm watching TCM's "Women Make Film" series and discovered this brilliant work.

  • @mpaxton8991
    @mpaxton8991 6 лет назад +10

    I love documentaries and have seen many, but this was my absolute favorite if all. I loved Lois Scott!

  • @leannlaplante3643
    @leannlaplante3643 3 месяца назад +1

    God bless the film crew, the miners, the union and especially the women of Harlan County. We are a union household and proud to be one.

  • @johns294
    @johns294 5 лет назад +10

    I really appreciate this documentary. I thought it was captivating as hell . ✌️

  • @castlelord8995
    @castlelord8995 3 года назад +2

    As many have mentioned this is the best documentary ever made. Should be required viewing for every American!!

  • @fifiaames5935
    @fifiaames5935 6 лет назад +14

    I love this film. Thank you so much for this behind the scenes look!

  • @leerussel2033
    @leerussel2033 Год назад +2

    The best documentary on labor ever. Thank You for doing this amazing film

  • @RogerCroucher-v5s
    @RogerCroucher-v5s 8 дней назад

    My boys great great grandmaw wrote " which side are you on " Florence Reece, they made a movie by that name,Nimrod workman first union president was main character, I knew Nimrod in mascot Tennessee, granny Reece lived in fountain city, loved talking to them

  • @terr777
    @terr777 3 года назад +5

    Lois Scott is my hero, why didn't we hear her name during the women's movement in the 70's? She's the biggest badass of them all!

  • @notfamousprepper7369
    @notfamousprepper7369 6 месяцев назад

    This truly is one of the greatest documentaries ever made. What an amazing video history of man’s struggle against the MAN. So glad these good people prevailed and bettered their lives as a result. Mining is so much more safe as a result of efforts like this.

  • @marklennox2151
    @marklennox2151 2 года назад

    I took a lot of film study classes as a high school/college burnout in the late '70s and when I was shown this and tried to comprehend it in the context of my privileged upbringing I was blown away. Words cannot do it justice. Best documentary ever. Thank you so much for adding this.

  • @bettymarler9999
    @bettymarler9999 3 года назад +2

    I wonder if any of these folks are still around. It would be great to see

  • @redeye7903
    @redeye7903 2 года назад +1

    Love it❤❤❤❤

  • @johngluck6938
    @johngluck6938 2 года назад +3

    This happened about 2 miles from my house.

  • @johns294
    @johns294 5 лет назад +5

    Lois Scott was awesome .

  • @WeeTodd-lp8bz
    @WeeTodd-lp8bz 2 месяца назад

    Bazel collins died in 1980 , now has a bridge dedicated to him in harlan county .

  • @packingten
    @packingten 5 лет назад +1

    Watch this movie 5 star great,But I used to be Married to a SE Ky miners daughter....Love these people!.

  • @nancyquinn522
    @nancyquinn522 Год назад

    I didn't know Anne Lewis (worked on film w Barbara Kopple) married Jerry Johnson and stayed in Harlan County for 15 years. Best documentary ever.

  • @amythomas-lx9zq
    @amythomas-lx9zq 7 месяцев назад

    My grandma Rosetta Hatton was very active in this documentary as well as the Brookside Mining strike. I looked to see if i could see her in the documentary or her name but no luck. Anyone know or see anything on her? Any information would be greatly appreciated

  • @madpax14
    @madpax14 Год назад

    I wish she would do a 2023 follow up, maybe a documentary about Lois Scott's and Basil Collin's biography.

  • @stephanien2286
    @stephanien2286 Год назад

    What song is at 7:20?

  • @mariebrown5681
    @mariebrown5681 2 года назад +2

    As I posted on the actual documentary, my maternal great-grandfather (my mom's mom's dad) was a coal miner in Wales (part of the UK). He died of black lung at the very young age of only 28. I'm 100% in support of all the coal miners.

  • @conlynhaynes1
    @conlynhaynes1 Год назад

    Seriously inquiring, Why did Harlan County name a bridge after Basil Collins ?

  • @gregfarley8510
    @gregfarley8510 4 года назад +1

    the best

  • @abc-jq4hi
    @abc-jq4hi Год назад +1

    They make Bazel Collins out to be such a bad guy in this film. He was captured by Japan in WWII and spent 3 years as as a POW and survived the bataan death march The city of Harlan named a bridge in his honor.

    • @SR-iz2eq
      @SR-iz2eq Год назад

      I looked up Arnold Miller who is missing an ear, and he stormed the beach at Normandy.
      I also wonder if the injuries to mine lawyers face was from WW2 as well.

  • @michaelbracken1714
    @michaelbracken1714 3 года назад +1

    WOW Is all I can say and think

  • @TrillaDilla410
    @TrillaDilla410 Год назад

    13:35 defined the women's movement perfectly.

  • @aarontate1667
    @aarontate1667 Год назад

    The individuals in this film were not characters by no means. They were real people not actors not celebrities they were real folks being their selves in every day life that is reality more than anything you’ll see on television today.

  • @stonecoal28
    @stonecoal28 13 часов назад

    My dad hauled coal from that mines

  • @larryholle7971
    @larryholle7971 Год назад

    lois scott reminds me of my grandmother she didnt take no shit either

  • @fritzburbank935
    @fritzburbank935 3 года назад

    I know the documentary is from 1976 but what year is this follow up?

  • @carlvitko1756
    @carlvitko1756 2 года назад

    Is Lois Scott's daughter still alive,or any of the people of Harlan involved,I'd love to sit and listen to their stories

    • @johngluck6938
      @johngluck6938 2 года назад +1

      I live here. Some are still alive.

    • @greggoodman5568
      @greggoodman5568 Год назад

      @@johngluck6938 Any idea where Bazel Collins is buried?