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Norma Rae
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Directed by Martin Ritt.
Norma Rae finds Sally Field cast in the title role, a minimum-wage worker in a cotton mill. The factory has taken too much of a toll on the health of Norma Rae's family for her to ignore her Dickensian working conditions. After hearing a speech by New York union organizer Reuben (Ron Leibman), Norma Rae decides to join the effort to unionize her shop. This causes dissension at home when Norma Rae's husband, Sonny (Beau Bridges), assumes that her activism is a result of a romance between herself and Reuben. Despite the pressure brought to bear by management, Norma Rae successfully orchestrates a shutdown of the mill, resulting in victory for the union and capitulation to its demands. Based on a true story, Norma Rae is the film for which Sally Field won her first Oscar; an additional Oscar went to David Shire and Norman Gimbel for the film's theme song, "It Goes Like It Goes." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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blakngoldblakngold Sticking it to the man
by blakngold in blakngold Blog
loved it.
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"Take a stand against what you know needs to change! This is a film about reclaiming your life and being challenged by the corporations that want to control it. Now, this isn't your typical Hollywood movie because this one doesn't revolve only around love and happiness. This is a statement against one of the main problems in working society that continues to create an endless struggle in America today.Sally Field is the main focus in this film and she truly is at her best. Her characters name is Norma Rae and she works at a low paying job in a cotton mill. They say people tend to take a stand when they've been pushed to their absolute limit. Well that happens to Norma when she discovers that her mother can no longer hear because of the ongoing uproariousness of these powerful machines in the cotton mill. She wants some sort of justification from the cotton mill but they act like nothing is wrong.Right about that time she discovers a kind man named Reuben who comes to her ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Before her Oscar-winning, breakthrough role as a union organizer in Norma Rae, Sally Field was famous for being television's The Flying Nun and for her subsequent lightweight comic work, particularly with Burt Reynolds in Smokey and the Bandit. Casting Field in the lead role of a poor, uneducated worker who organizes a Southern mill proved to be a stroke of genius. She wasn't known for portraying assertive, powerful characters, and so her transformation in the film from mousy and helpless to an icon of resistance symbolized for many audiences similar psychic and social journeys. Norma Rae became an authentic portrait of empowerment because its heroine (and the actress portraying her) seemed so ordinary to begin with. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
 



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HairyLime
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blakngold
blakngold
loved it.
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