Thirteen years after her Academy Award-winning Harlan County, USA. Kopple has produced another brilliantly original inquiry into the American social and political landscape. For over six years she has documented the course of a strike by the workers of Local P-9 of the International Union of Meat Cutters. In the small town of Austin, Minnesota, the Hormel Company imposed a substantial wage reduction on the fifteen hundred workers in its meat-packing plant. Coming in the midst of the Reagan era, the cuts were a shock to the expectations of middle-class, union wage earners who had come to believe in an ever-improving standard of living and a comfortable life. The reductions provoked the union into a strike which management clearly had anticipated and was ready to deal with at any cost.
But American Dream is not a black-and-white story of the injustices of corporate America. What emerges from the struggle is’a strategic battle within the union itself, which pits the local against the international and fragments the union. The American labor movement has entered a new era in the eighties and nineties; the question it faces is whether it can ever again be truly effective.
Kopple’s film is not, however, a dry examination or an ideological call to arms. It is a passionate and moving portrait of the coldhearted consequences of the strife for individual workers and their families. Their small town is tragically torn apart, scaring forever the intimate fraternity which constitutes American social life by pitting brother against brother, and friend against friend, in a no-win situation. The powerlessness of people to control what happens to them is depressingly real. American Dream taps into the collective psyche of a society in a critical period fighting to avert a bleak destiny. –Sundance Film Festival
Barbara Kopple (born July 30, 1946) is an American film director, primarily known for her work in documentary film.
She grew up in Scarsdale, New York, the daughter of a textile executive and studied psychology at Northeastern University, after which she worked with the Maysles Brothers.
Kopple has won two Academy Awards, the first in 1976 for Harlan County, USA, about a Kentucky miners’ strike, and the second in 1991 for American Dream, the story of the Hormel Foods strike in Austin, Minnesota in 1985-86. She has directed episodes of the television drama series Homicide: Life on the Street and Oz, winning a Directors Guild of America award for the former. Kopple also directed A Conversation With Gregory Peck and Bearing Witness, as well as documentaries on Mike Tyson and Woody Allen. The latter film, Wild Man Blues, focuses on his Dixieland jazz tour and on Allen’s relationship with Soon-Yi Previn.
Her first non-documentary feature film, Havoc, starred Anne Hathaway… read more