Salt of the Earth (1954 film)

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Salt of the Earth
Salt of the Earth (1954 film poster).jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Herbert J. Biberman
Screenplay by Michael Wilson
Produced by Paul Jarrico
Starring
Cinematography
  • Stanley Meredith
  • Leonard Stark
Edited by
  • Joan Laird
  • Ed Spiegel
Music by Sol Kaplan
Distributed byIndependent Productions
Release date
  • March 14, 1954 (1954-03-14)(New York City)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesEnglish
Spanish
Budget$250,000

Salt of the Earth is a 1954 American film drama written by Michael Wilson, directed by Herbert J. Biberman, and produced by Paul Jarrico. Because all three men were blacklisted by the Hollywood establishment due to their alleged involvement in communist politics, [1] Salt of the Earth was one of the first fully independent films made outside of the Hollywood studio system.

Contents

It was also one of the first motion pictures to advance the feminist social and political point of view. Its plot centers on a long and difficult strike, based on the 1951 strike against the Empire Zinc Company in Grant County, New Mexico. The company is identified as "Delaware Zinc", and the setting is "Zinc Town, New Mexico". The film shows how the miners, the company, and the police react during the strike. Shot in a style influenced by Italian neorealism, and making atmospheric use of New Mexico's landscapes, Salt of the Earth employed mostly local miners and their families as actors. [1] [2]

The film was initially mired in Red Scare controversy and was suppressed. Eventually though, it was seen by more and more people until it came to be recognized as an important cultural, political and aesthetic work. In 1992, it was selected to the Library of Congress's National Film Registry of significant U.S. films. [3]

Plot

Esperanza and Ramon Sotecouplepic.jpg
Esperanza and Ramón

Esperanza Quintero is a miner's wife in Zinc Town, New Mexico, a community which is essentially run and owned by Delaware Zinc, Inc. Esperanza is thirty-five years old, pregnant with her third child and emotionally dominated by her husband, Ramón Quintero. [4] We know from her concern about her onomásticos or día de mi/su santo (a.k.a. Name Day) that it is the 12th November as that is the onomásticos of persons named Esperanza.

The majority of the miners are Mexican-Americans and want decent working conditions equal to those of white or "Anglo" miners. The unionized workers go on strike, but the company refuses to negotiate and the impasse continues for months. Esperanza gives birth and, simultaneously, Ramón is beaten by police and jailed on bogus assault charges following an altercation with a union worker who betrayed his fellows. When Ramón is released, Esperanza tells him that he's no good to her in jail. He counters that if the strike succeeds, they will not only get better conditions right now but also win hope for their children's futures. [4]

Miners before they strike Salt104.jpg
Miners before they strike

The company presents a Taft-Hartley Act injunction to the union, meaning any miners who picket will be arrested. Taking advantage of a loophole, the wives picket in their husbands' places. Some men dislike this tactic, seeing it as improper and dangerous. At first, Ramón forbids Esperanza from picketing, but she eventually joins the line while carrying her baby. [4]

The sheriff, by company orders, arrests the leading women of the strike. Esperanza is among those taken to jail. The women are loud and unruly in jail and make it so unendurable for the sheriff, he releases them. [5] When Esperanza returns home, Ramón tells her the strike is hopeless, as the company will easily outlast the miners. She insists that the union is stronger than ever and asks Ramón why he can't accept her as an equal in their marriage. Both angry, they sleep separately that night. [4]

The next day the company evicts the Quintero family from their house. The union men and women arrive to protest the eviction. Ramón tells Esperanza that they can all fight together. The mass of workers and their families prove successful in saving the Quinteros' home. The company admits defeat and plans to negotiate. Esperanza believes that the community has won something no company can ever take away and it will be inherited by her children. [4]

Cast

Professional actors

Non-professional actors

Production

Miners and their kids are jailed by the law Salt105.JPG
Miners and their kids are jailed by the law

Herbert Biberman was one of the ten Hollywood screenwriters and directors who refused in 1947 to answer questions from the House Committee on Un-American Activities about their affiliations with the Communist Party USA. The "Hollywood Ten" were cited for contempt of Congress and jailed. Biberman was imprisoned in the Federal Correctional Institution at Texarkana for six months. After his release, and unable to obtain work in Hollywood, he met with fellow blacklistees about establishing their own production company and collaborating to make movies. [6] In 1951, they formed the Independent Productions Corporation (IPC). [1] Salt of the Earth was the sole production that IPC was able to finish. [7] Other blacklistees who participated in the movie included Paul Jarrico, Will Geer, and Michael Wilson. [3] [8]

Before production commenced in Silver City, New Mexico, the mainstream press already labeled the film dangerous and subversive because it was known to be the creation of blacklisted professionals, and because the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (a.k.a. "Mine Mill") was helping to fund it. The Mine Mill union had been expelled from the CIO in 1950 for its unwillingness to purge suspected Communists from its leadership. [5] The Hollywood Reporter warned readers that "H'wood Reds are shooting a feature length anti-American racial issue propaganda movie." Newsweek headlined its attack on the film, "Reds in the Desert". [9]

As Tom Miller notes in a Cinéaste article, the early negative publicity made it difficult to assemble a film crew: "The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees—IATSE, an AFL affiliate—refused to allow its members to work on Salt of the Earth because of the movie's politics. That the Hollywood unions wouldn't let their members work on such a pro-union film was bitter irony." [9] As a consequence, IPC had to scramble to put together a makeshift crew.

Juan Chacon as Ramon Quintero Sotejuanpic.jpg
Juan Chacón as Ramón Quintero

Only five professional actors were cast. The rest were residents of Grant County, New Mexico, or members of Mine Mill, Local 890, many of whom took part in the strike that inspired the movie. Juan Chacón was a real-life union local president. In the film he plays the protagonist who has trouble dealing with women as equals. [10] The director was reluctant to cast him at first, thinking he was too "gentle", but both Revueltas and the director's sister-in-law, Sonja Dahl Biberman (wife of Biberman's brother Edward), urged him to cast Chacón as Ramón. [11]

According to one journalist's account, "During the course of production in New Mexico in 1953, the trade press denounced it as a subversive plot, anti-Communist vigilantes fired rifle shots at the set, the film's leading lady Rosaura Revueltas was deported to Mexico, and from time to time a small airplane buzzed noisily overhead ... The film, edited in secret, was stored for safekeeping in an anonymous wooden shack in Los Angeles." [12] After principal photography ended, laboratories wouldn't process the film, which delayed postproduction work for months. [13] As producer Paul Jarrico recalled in a 1983 interview, "I had to trot around the country with cans of film under my arms, putting the film through different labs under phony names. We had a lot of trouble, but we did complete the film, despite the obstacles." [14]

Reception

Critical response

With McCarthyism in full force at the time of release, the movie establishment did not embrace Salt of the Earth. Pauline Kael, who reviewed it for Sight and Sound , panned it as a simplistic left-wing "morality play" and said it was "as clear a piece of Communist propaganda as we have had in many years." [13] Variety praised several elements in the film but called it "a propaganda picture which belongs in union halls rather than theatres." [15]

Bosley Crowther, film critic for The New York Times , reviewed the picture somewhat favorably, both for its direction and screenplay:

Salt of the Earth is, in substance, simply a strong pro-labor film with a particularly sympathetic interest in the Mexican-Americans with whom it deals....But the real dramatic crux of the picture is the stern and bitter conflict within the membership of the union. It is the issue of whether the women shall have equality of expression and of strike participation with the men. And it is along this line of contention that Michael Wilson's tautly muscled script develops considerable personal drama, raw emotion and power. [16]

As anti-Communist fervor waned, the movie started to be judged on its merits. By 2021, the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 100% of critics (based on thirteen reviews) had given the movie a positive rating. [17]

Suppression

Although Salt of the Earth received limited distribution in Western and Eastern Europe in the 1950s and won awards there, it was nearly impossible to see it in the United States. After its opening night in New York City, it languished for a decade because only thirteen theaters in the country were willing to show it. [18] Roy Brewer of the IATSE leveraged his ties with the projectionists' union to cancel numerous bookings. [19] The American Legion threatened to picket any theater that exhibited the movie. [20] Salt of the Earth was denounced by the U.S. House of Representatives for its communist sympathies, and the FBI investigated the film's financing, looking for evidence of foreign funds that could justify prosecution under the Foreign Agents Registration Act. [21]

In 1959, officials from the United States Information Agency testified before a House Appropriations subcommittee that a handful of movies, including Salt of the Earth, "were giving the United States trouble overseas." Representative Frank T. Bow (R-OH) said, "such films were painting a false picture abroad of the United States and that something should be done about it." [22] It wasn't until 1965 that Salt of the Earth was re-released.

Accolades

Later history

Union meeting in the film Sotemeetingpic.jpg
Union meeting in the film

The story of the suppression of Salt of the Earth, as well as the people and labor struggle it depicts, inspired an underground audience of unionists, feminists, Mexican-Americans, leftists, film historians, and labor scholars. [13] The movie found a new life in the U.S. in the late 1960s and early '70s and reached larger audiences through union halls, college campuses, art houses, women's associations, and film schools, even though it was projected with a relatively poor 16mm stock. [18] [26]

In subsequent decades, the film was shown on public television and released on videocassette. In 1997, Turner Classic Movies screened Salt of the Earth which further raised its profile beyond the initial cult following. [27] In the early 2000s, the film's 50th anniversary prompted a number of commemorative events, including a national conference hosted by the College of Santa Fe in which Salt of the Earth was called "one of the most important and controversial films in American cinema history." [24] In an interview, political commentator Noam Chomsky praised the film's portrayal of union activity: "[T]he real work is being done by people who are not known, that's always been true in every popular movement in history ... I don't know how you get that across in a film. Actually, come to think of it, there are some films that have done it. I mean, I don't see a lot of visual stuff ... but I thought Salt of the Earth really did it. It was a long time ago, but at the time I thought that it was one of the really great movies—and of course it was killed, I think it was almost never shown." [28]

The "Salt of the Earth Labor College" located in Tucson, Arizona is named after the film. The pro-labor institution (not a college per se) holds lectures and forums related to unionism and economic justice. The film is screened on a frequent basis. [29]

Other releases

The full film

In 1987, a laserdisc version was released by the Voyager Company. [30] On July 27, 1999, a digitally restored print of the film was released on DVD by Organa through Geneon (Pioneer), and packaged with the documentary The Hollywood Ten , which reported on the ten filmmakers who were blacklisted for refusing to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). In 2004, a budget edition DVD was released by Alpha Video.

Because the film's copyright was not renewed in 1982, [31] Salt of the Earth is now in the public domain. [32] [33]

Adaptations

The film was adapted into a two-act opera called Esperanza (Hope). The labor movement in Wisconsin along with University of Wisconsin–Madison opera professor Karlos Moser commissioned the production. The music was written by David Bishop and the libretto by Carlos Morton. The opera premiered in Madison, Wisconsin, on August 25, 2000, to positive reviews. [34]

Portrayals in media

John Sayles' Return of the Secaucus 7 (1980) includes a wry homage to Salt of the Earth. When the reunited baby boomer characters are briefly jailed, they reminisce about their radical college days when they were locked up in a Secaucus, New Jersey jail and chanted "We want the formula! We want the formula!" to bewildered guards. The guards didn't realize it was an allusion to a Salt of the Earth scene in which the picketing Mexican-American women are arrested and thrown in jail. Esperanza has her infant child with her, and all the women chant "We want the formula!" to pressure the sheriff to either bring formula for the hungry baby or let them out of jail. He opts for the latter. [35]

A documentary titled A Crime to Fit the Punishment, about the making of the film, was released in 1982 and directed by Barbara Moss and Stephen Mack. [36] The title comes from a Paul Jarrico quote regarding the blacklistees who formed Independent Productions Corporation: "I have said that Salt of the Earth was our chance to really say something in film, because we had already been punished, we had already been blacklisted. I used the phrase, 'We wanted to commit a crime to fit the punishment.'" [14] The documentary premiered on May 1, 1982 in Silver City, New Mexico, with many of the surviving Salt of the Earth cast and crew members in attendance. [37]

A film drama, also based on the making of Salt of the Earth, was chronicled in One of the Hollywood Ten (2000). It was produced and directed by Karl Francis, starred Jeff Goldblum and Greta Scacchi, and was released in European countries on September 29, 2000. [38]

A fictionalized account of the movie's production figured prominently in the Audible podcast series, The Big Lie (2022). Based on source material written by Paul Jarrico, the production features voice performances from Jon Hamm, Kate Mara, Ana de la Reguera, Bradley Whitford, John Slattery, Giancarlo Esposito, and David Strathairn, and was written by John Mankiewicz and Jamie Napoli. [39] [40]

See also

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References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Salt of the Earth at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films .
  2. Sandhu, Sukhdev (10 March 2014). "Salt of the Earth: Made of labour, by labour, for labour". The Guardian.
  3. 1 2 McNearney, Allison (26 June 2022). "The Insane Saga of 'Salt of the Earth,' the Only Film to Be Blacklisted". Daily Beast.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Synopsis of Salt of the Earth". TCM.
  5. 1 2 Gross, Linda (7 February 1976). "'Salt of Earth' at the Royal". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 August 2013 via CineFiles.
  6. Radosh, Ronald; Radosh, Allis (2005). Red Star Over Hollywood: The Film Colony's Long Romance with the Left. San Francisco: Encounter Books. pp. 211–212. ISBN   1-893554-96-1.
  7. "The Hollywood Ten". University of California, Berkeley. 20 May 1999. Archived from the original on 22 April 2000.
  8. Henkel, Scott; Fonseca, Vanessa (2016). "Fearless Speech and the Discourse of Civility in Salt of the Earth". Chiricú. 1 (1): 19–38. doi:10.2979/chiricu.1.1.03. JSTOR   10.2979/chiricu.1.1.03.
  9. 1 2 Miller, Tom (1984). "Class Reunion: 'Salt of the Earth' Revisited". Cinéaste . 13 (3): 30–36. JSTOR   41686417.
  10. "A Nation of Immigrants". University of Virginia. 26 October 1995. Archived from the original on 16 October 2006.
  11. Boisson, Steve (February 2002). "Salt of the Earth: The Movie Hollywood Could Not Stop". American History. Archived from the original on 2 June 2008. Retrieved 18 August 2013 via HistoryNet.com.
  12. Hockstader, Lee (April 2003). "Blacklisted Film Restored and Rehabilitated". Socialist Viewpoint. 3 (4).
  13. 1 2 3 Wake, Bob (2001). "Book review of James J. Lorence's The Suppression of Salt of the Earth.". culturevulture.net. Archived from the original on 18 November 2012.
  14. 1 2 McGilligan, Patrick; Buhle, Paul (1997). "Paul Jarrico". Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 342. ISBN   0-312-17046-7.
  15. "Salt of the Earth". Variety. 31 December 1953.
  16. Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times , film review, "Salt of the Earth Opens at the Grande -- Filming Marked by Violence," March 15, 1954. Accessed: April 28, 2019.
  17. Salt of the Earth at Rotten Tomatoes. Accessed: 7 October 2024.
  18. 1 2 Waring, Rob (21 December 1999). "Not for Ourselves Alone and Salt of the Earth: The Interplay of Race and Gender". Picturing Justice. Archived from the original on 31 December 2006 via University of San Francisco.
  19. Lorence, James J. (1999). The Suppression of Salt of the Earth: How Hollywood, Big Labor, and Politicians Blacklisted a Movie in Cold War America. University of New Mexico Press. p. 83. ISBN   978-0826320285.
  20. Lorence 1999, p. 110.
  21. Lorence 1999, pp. 87–88.
  22. "U.S. Lists Movies It Limits Abroad". The New York Times. 24 May 1959.
  23. "8th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival". KVIFF. Archived from the original on 4 November 2013.
  24. 1 2 Pecinovsky, Tony (22 May 2003). "Salt of the Earth continues to inspire". People's Weekly World Newspaper. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  25. Brief Descriptions and Expanded Essays of National Film Registry Titles | Film Registry | National Film Preservation Board
  26. Ceplair, Larry; Englund, Steven (1983). The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community 1930–1960. University of California Press. p. 418. ISBN   978-0520048867.
  27. Lorence 1999, p. 194.
  28. "An Exchange on Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky interviewed by various activists". The Noam Chomsky Website. excerpted from Understanding Power (The New Press, 2002).
  29. "Salt of the Earth Labor College". 15 August 2020. Archived from the original on 15 August 2020.
  30. "Salt of the Earth Special Edition LaserDisc, Rare LaserDiscs, Criterion LaserDiscs". DaDon's. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
  31. Ceplair, Larry (2007). The Marxist and the Movies: A Biography of Paul Jarrico. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN   9780813173009. OCLC   182624495.
  32. Campbell, Christopher (7 January 2012). "10 Great Films Set in New Mexico – For the State's Centennial". IndieWire . Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  33. Weinberg, Carl R. (October 2010). "Salt of the Earth: Labor, Film, and the Cold War" (PDF). OAH Magazine of History. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  34. "Images of Labor from American Musical Theater: Songs and Narration about Workers and Unions". Wisconsin Labor History Society. Archived from the original on 21 February 2007.
  35. Doherty, Thomas (August 2000). "The Suppression of Salt of the Earth: How Hollywood, Big Labor, and Politicians Blacklisted a Movie in Cold War America". Labor History. 41 (3): 380–382. ProQuest   221088316 via ProQuest.
  36. Rosenberg, Mimi (7 October 1982). "A Crime To Fit The Punishment: an interview with the filmmakers". Pacifica Radio Archives. Retrieved 10 October 2024 via Internet Archive.
  37. "Reunion Recalls Movie on Hispanic Strikers Made at the Time of Film Blacklist". The New York Times. 3 May 1982. p. A16.
  38. Holden, Stephen (11 January 2002). "Back to an Era of Slurs, Paranoia and Persecution". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 November 2007.
  39. Spangler, Todd (1 June 2022). "Audible Drops Trailer for 'The Big Lie' Podcast Drama Starring Jon Hamm, Set in '50s Hollywood Blacklist Era". Variety. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  40. Kleitman, Nathaniel (1950). "The Big Lie". Science. 112 (2912): 475. Bibcode:1950Sci...112R.475K. doi:10.1126/science.112.2912.475. PMID   14781822. S2CID   9356643.

Further reading