32 Court St, 21st Flr
Brooklyn, NY 11201
(718) 488-8900
mailroom@frif.com




Search our
catalog:




Help



Sign up for our mailing list

RSS file with updates in XML
RSS Info
 

View titles
by subject:


 
Home New Release Title List Subject List Ordering Info Media Resources Online Catalogs

A Crime to Fit the Punishment

A Film by Barbara Moss & Stephen Mack


film still

In 1954, at the height of McCarthyism and the Cold War, blacklisted filmmakers joined together to create the controversial labor film Salt of the Earth, despite strong oppposition from a fearful Hollywood and the U.S. government. A CRIME TO FIT THE PUNISHMENT investigates the background and political atmosphere surrounding the production of the film, and movingly chronicles the filmmakers' defiance of the blacklist.

Interviews with the actors and clips from Salt of the Earth - which presciently championed the rights of workers, minorities, and women - are interwoven with newsreel and broadcast footage from the 50s, creating a fascinating examination of the relationship between film and politics.

"This documentary and 'Salt' itself stand as stand as monuments to the spirit of resistance that animated those involved." - Larry Ceplair, Cineaste

"The argument CRIME presents is well documented and convincing, occasionally funny, and often moving." - Peter Ross, Detroit News

"Strokes as tough and bold as those of a mural by Orozco... The film pulsates with a feeling of actuality..." - San Francisco Chronicle

** Blue Ribbon, 1983 American Film Festival
** Honorable Mention, 1982 London Film Festival

46 minutes / color
Copyright Date: 1982
Sale/video: $375
Rental/VHS: $85


Subject areas: American Studies, Cinema Studies, Cold War Era, Labor Studies, Legal Studies, North America


Home | New | Titles | Subjects | Ordering | Resources | PDFs
Weblog | Current Concerns | Banner Ads | Video Clips | Site Map | RSS
Closed Captions | Study Guides | Postcards | Filmmakers | Screenings


Last updated 05/31/2008