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Newsreel

Directing

Biography

The Newsreel, most frequently called Newsreel, was an American filmmaking collective founded in New York City in late 1967. In keeping with the radical student/youth, antiwar and Black power movements of the time, the group explicitly described its purpose as using "films and other propaganda in aiding the revolutionary movement."

Known For

The Woman's Film
4.3

Produced collectively by women, this documentary is a valuable historical document of the origins of the modern women's movement in the United States. The film delves into the lives of ordinary women from different races, educational levels and social classes. Filmed mostly in small consciousness-raising groups, from which the women's movement grew, the women talk about the daily realities of their lives as wives, home-makers, and workers. They speak, sometimes with hesitancy, often with passion, about the oppression of women as they see it.

The Woman's Film

1971
Resist with Noam Chomsky (Newsreel #1)
N/A

This short film offers a rare look at Noam Chomsky in the late 1960s as he speaks candidly about the war in Vietnam and articulates critiques that have an eerie resonance in the present day. Includes a draft-refusal demonstration, and material about the indictments against Benjamin Spock, William S. Coffin Jr and others.

Resist with Noam Chomsky (Newsreel #1)

1968
The Columbia Revolt (Newsreel #14)
6.5

In April 1968, black and white students rebelled against the university administration, occupying five buildings, including the president's office in one of the first campus revolts of the Civil Rights/Vietnam War era. The revolt began as a protest against university expansion into neighboring communities and its role as a slum lord. After five days of student control, the administrators and trustees ordered the police to clear the buildings. What resulted was an unprecedented display of brutality and repression. Narrated by one of the student rebels, the detailed eyewitness account of this event galvanized other campus revolts around the country.

The Columbia Revolt (Newsreel #14)

1968
We Are the Palestinian People (Newsreel #65)
N/A

Filmed in Palestine by Newsreel, WE ARE THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE shows the refugee camps of the Middle East, the rise of the Palestinian Liberation Movement and Israel's relation ship to the Western imperialism. There is footage of the guerrillas in training, and interviews with Palestinian leaders and militants who work in many programs of the liberation struggle of the time.

We Are the Palestinian People (Newsreel #65)

1973
Mill-In (Newsreel #6)
N/A

In order to raise the consciousness of New Yorkers, anti-war demonstrators took to the streets on fashionable Fifth Avenue on Christmas eve. To the dismay of the shoppers, their action snarled traffic and stunted holiday consumption.

Mill-In (Newsreel #6)

1968
Garbage Demonstration (Newsreel #5)
N/A

During a prolonged garbage collector's strike in New York City, a group of youths from the Lower East Side of Manhattan decide to use the situation to make a political statement. They collect garbage from the streets of their community and deposit piles of it on the grounds of Lincoln Center, "The Establishment's" cultural showcase.

Garbage Demonstration (Newsreel #5)

1968
Pig Power (Newsreel #23)
N/A

As students take to the streets in New York and Berkeley, the state violence that follows illustrates Chicago Mayor Daley's thesis that the police are there "to preserve disorder".

Pig Power (Newsreel #23)

1968
Chicago (Newsreel #12)
N/A

As leaders of the Movement met in the relative calm of a Chicago suburb in March to plan the strategy for the summer, the empty streets of the city are waiting, and ominous. An inside look at some of the planning that led to the 1968 Convention challenge.

Chicago (Newsreel #12)

1968
Resist and the New England Resistance (Newsreel #8)
N/A

This film gives a general outline of the kinds of work being done in The Boston-Cambridge area by National Resist and the New England Resistance.

Resist and the New England Resistance (Newsreel #8)

1968
Four Americans (Newsreel #3)
N/A

An extended interview with the four American sailors who deserted in protest against the war in Vietnam in 1967. Filmed in Japan, the interviews reveal much about how they reached their decision to desert.

Four Americans (Newsreel #3)

1967
People's Park (Newsreel #33)
N/A

In the late 1960s the University of California at Berkeley began buying up and destroying a nearby area populated by hippies, the poor, and other members of the "counter culture". In retaliation, the community laid claim to a barren block being used as a parking lot to create a People's Park. The National Guard was called in to occupy Berkeley and a young man was killed. This film documents the infamous struggle resulting in the destruction of the park.

People's Park (Newsreel #33)

1969
Boston Draft Resistance Group (Newsreel #7)
N/A

A profile of a grassroots anti-war group in Boston, this short film documents some of the tactics and activities used by draft resistance groups across the country during the Vietnam War. Using the law to keep young men out of the war, this group helped over 150 people each week escape service and educate themselves and their communities about alternatives to combat.

Boston Draft Resistance Group (Newsreel #7)

1968
The Case Against Lincoln Center (Newsreel #16)
N/A

"More than 20,000 Latino families were displaced to make way for Lincoln Center, home to the Metropolitan Opera and the New York Symphony. This film examines the patrons of art complex (corporations and wealthy families) and the culture displayed there. Juxtaposing the atmosphere of Lincoln Center with the vibrant street culture of a displaced neighborhood, the film correctly predicts the process by which the West Side was to be turned into a high-rent area for the upper middle class" - Third World Newsreel

The Case Against Lincoln Center (Newsreel #16)

1968
Earth Belongs to the People
N/A

An analysis of the ecological crisis, this film dispells the myths that big business and big government had been telling the people about the global ecological crisis.

Earth Belongs to the People

1971
Berkeley Rebellion (Newsreel #20)
N/A

Newsreel's short film shows two days of demonstrations in Berkeley over the issue of "the streets belong to the people" and the decision of the City Council to close off Telegraph Avenue for the 4th of July, 1968. This film features scenes of members of the Young Socialist Alliance, including Peter Camejo, demonstrating their support for the French student movement of May 1968.

Berkeley Rebellion (Newsreel #20)

1968
Break and Enter (Newsreel #62)
N/A

Break and Enter documents Operation Move In and the New York squatter’s movement in the 1970s. In 1970, several hundred Puerto Rican and Dominican families reclaimed housing left vacant by the city. They pulled the boards off the doors, cleaned and repaired the buildings and moved in.

Break and Enter (Newsreel #62)

1971
Herman B. Ferguson, Candidate for U.S. Senate (Newsreel #15)
N/A

A film about Herman Ferguson, a candidate for the U.S. Senate on the Freedom and Peace ticket in the 1968 election.

Herman B. Ferguson, Candidate for U.S. Senate (Newsreel #15)

1968
6th Street Meat Club (Newsreel #11)
N/A

Formed on the Lower East Side of New York to side step high prices, poor quality, and weight cheating of local supermarkets.

6th Street Meat Club (Newsreel #11)

1968
High School Rising (Newsreel #38)
N/A

An analysis of how the schools by using the tracking system, exploit and oppress people in terms of class origins and how students can begin to organize.

High School Rising (Newsreel #38)

1969
Catonsville Nine (Newsreel #18)
N/A

Filmed in Baltimore during the support demonstrations for the nine catholics who were on trial for napalming the 1-A Draft files in Catonsville, Maryland. The film examines some relationships between radical catholicism and the Movement.

Catonsville Nine (Newsreel #18)

1968