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“UNION” Screening

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August 31, 2024 @ 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm

Free

Wrap up the summer with an outdoor screening at the Workers Arts and Heritage Centre! To celebrate Labour Day weekend we are showing the award winning documentary UNION directed by Brett Story and Stephen Maing on August 31st in Custom House’s back garden. Please note that in the event of inclement weather we’ll move the screening inside into the Main Gallery.

UNION follows the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) — a group of current and former Amazon workers in New York City’s Staten Island — as they take on one of the world’s largest and most powerful companies in the fight to unionize. Since its premiere earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, where it won the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for the Art of Social Change, it has been on a successful festival run with showings around the world and are delighted to be hosting its Hamilton premiere. 

This event is free and family friendly but recommended for ages 12 and up. Save yourself a spot in advance so you don’t miss out! Doors will open at 7 and the film is scheduled to begin at sundown (8pm-ish). 

We’re delighted to announce Co-Director Brett Story will be on hand for a post-screening Q+A with WAHC Staff.

The film will be shown with Closed Captions

Thanks to our event presenters, CUPE 3906,  McMaster University School of Labour Studies and the Hamilton and District Labour Council, for helping us make this event possible!  

About the Film: On April 1, 2022 a group of ordinary workers made history when they did what everyone thought was impossible: they successfully won their election to become the very first unionized Amazon workplace in America. This feat would be extraordinary for any union, let alone the Amazon Labor Union (ALU), who did it with no prior organizing experience, no institutional backing, and a total budget of $120,000 raised on GoFundMe. Heralded as the most important win for labor since the 1930s, our documentary captures the ALU’s historic grassroots campaign to unionize thousands of their co-workers from day one of organizing. 

Described by ALU President Christian Smalls as the “N.W.A. of the organizing world,” the group’s persona and strategies are highly unconventional: from wearing Money Heist costumes at press conferences to distributing free marijuana to workers. A core emotional arc arises out of the journey of our worker-turned-organizers through a series of political battles, pivotal strategic events, and interpersonal tensions that test their commitments and their solidarity. Up against a corporate superpower and with legal protections at a drastic low for workers, all odds are against the ALU. Yet our protagonists remain unswayed in their beliefs in collective action and the dignity and power of the working-class.

Running time: 104 minutes

Directors Bios:
BRETT STORY – Director + Producer 

Brett Story is an award-winning filmmaker and writer based in Toronto. Her films have screened in theatres and festivals internationally, including at CPH-DOX, SXSW, True/False, and Sheffield Doc/Fest. She is the director of the award-winning films The Prison in Twelve Landscapes (2016) and The Hottest August (2019), and author of the book Prison Land: Mapping Carceral Power Across Neoliberal America. The Hottest August was a New York Times Critics’ Pick and was called one of the ten best documentary films of 2019 by over a dozen publications, including Variety, Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. Brett has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Sundance Institute, and was named one of Variety’s 10 Documentary Filmmakers to Watch. In 2020 she was nominated for a Cinema Eye Award for Best Director. She holds a PhD in geography and is currently an assistant professor of Media Praxis at the University of Toronto. 

STEPHEN MAING – Director, Cinematographer, Editor, Producer
Stephen Maing is an Emmy-award winning filmmaker based in New York. His feature documentary Crime + Punishment, which he directed, filmed and edited, won a Special Jury Award at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, an Emmy Award for Outstanding Social Issue Documentary and was shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Documentary. His previous films, High Tech, Low Life, which he directed, filmed and edited over five years, and The Surrender, have screened internationally and were released on P.O.V. and Field of Vision, respectively. Maing is a 2021 United States Artists Fellow, Sundance Institute Fellow, NBC Original Voices Fellow, John Jay/Harry Frank Guggenheim Reporting Fellow and a recipient of the IDA’s prestigious Courage Under Fire Award shared with the whistleblowers of the NYPD12. He is a frequent visiting artist and educator based in Ridgewood, Queens.