“In Dubious Battle,” film directed by James Franco, 2016
Every battle against the forces of capital is dubious. The guns, the courts, money, the propaganda news organizations, the government, the petit-bourgeoisie – all conspire against the worker. The whole ‘top-side’ of society line up against labor and those below. ‘Winning’ is never a sure thing … in fact it is the rarity.
This
film, and the 1936 Steinbeck book, looks at a struggle of migrant apple-pickers
in the made-up Torgus valley in 1931, which resulted in a strike led by what
seem like a blend of IWW elements, not CPers as in the novel. It probably was modeled after a real strike in
Tulare County, California in the Central Valley. The workers are light-skinned ‘Boomers’
or Sooners who traveled to California for $3 an hour in pay, only to be told it
was $1 an hour when they got there.
This
somewhat melodramatic and long film is packed with stars – James Franco, Robert
Duvall, Sam Shepard, Vincent D’Onofrio, Selena Gomez, Ed Harris, Bryan
Cranston. Franco plays the lead
character Mack, which is about as convincing as dirt. The essential movement of the film (and book)
is how a large group of 900 workers change, take actions and have internal conflicts
under the violent and blood-sucking pressure-cooker of police, growers, sheriff,
gun thugs, hunger and fear. As to the
result, Gomez’ character notes: “I know
these men.”
Mack,
the leftist, seems to be a manipulative leader in this film for awhile. He really says at one point that “the worse
it gets, the better.” What you are left
with is that class struggle is a violent and losing proposition. The film serves as a description of the
battle in the farm fields, but it might dissuade all but the most desperate to
follow its lead, at least in 1936. But many did.
California farm workers in the Central Valley |
In the
film desperate scabs brought in by rail are turned around because an IWW leftie
gets killed by gun thugs, but some still go to work. Strike sympathizers are burned out and beaten.
The local city council tries to
starve-out the strikers. The local strike
leader, London, is bribed to take a high-paying job but rejects the offer. Scabs are in the fields, anti-communism rises
among the strikers, a blockade is put on the strikers’ camp. Bullshit rumors are introduced by traitors and
a barn-full of an ally’s apples is burned, instigated by the snake-like
blandishments of the boss’s daughter. The strikers try to respond in kind, pummeling a
spy, breaking a barrier, beating scabs and burning a grower’s house. The film bails out of an ending on this particular strike, except for martyrdom. It lists all the pro-union laws passed by Roosevelt's government instead to give it a happy ending.
As has
been said before, capital resorts to fascist tactics when its grip on power
weakens or slips. 'Democracy' is a hollow shell. Strike a bell?
Latino
workers, local and immigrant, have replaced the ‘Okies’ of the 1930s. The United Farm Workers, big in the 1970s, is
now a husk of its former self. Legal below-minimum
wages for farmworkers still reign in the fields of California, Florida and
beyond – even though in the U.S. there are almost as many farmworkers as
farmers now. $7.25 has been the minimum
since 2010, for 11 years. It was $1 in the 1970s. Some improvements due to state laws have been
instituted. But the situation remains
somewhat the same – 90 years after this fictional strike. Which tells you something about the system we
live in – essentially rigid, unchanging and exploitative still. They don't need Gatling guns much anymore.
Rotten
Tomatoes reviewers
hated this film.
Prior
blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate
our 14-year archive, using these terms: “The Jungle," "Viva Zapata," "Polar Star," "Factory Days," "American Rust," "Red Baker," "Foodopoly," "A Foodies Guide to Capitalism," "Far From the Madding Crowd," "The Latino Question."
In Dubious Battle by Steinbeck is for sale in May Day’s excellent progressive, political and proletarian fiction section.
The Kultur Kommissar
November 16, 2021
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