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49 min 1991 IMDb 7.1

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Death on the Job

Documentary

🎬 Critics Choice Nominee
Director Vince DiPersio
Status Released
Release Date 1991-11-17

Storyline

A revealing look at how workers' safety is being compromised with tragic results. Interviews with accident investigators, co-workers, and victims' families detail the causes and consequences of accidents, while extensive news footage and home videos taken by accident survivors and family members expose the hazards of such industries as commercial fishing, construction and chemical refineries. An indictment of inadequate governmental safeguards, this important film makes a plea for the protection of workers.

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CinemaSerf ★ 6.0

"When this was made, there were over 600,000 industrial accidents in the United States, and a further 2,100 people died as a result of incidents at work. There are a few specific examples developed here, starting with some excessive fishing that resulted in the sinking of a trawler in perfectly calm waters; a mining disaster caused by a build up of methane gas and then a massive explosion at a Texan petrochemical plant. Using interviews from survivors and relatives of these disasters, the thrust of the narrative aims clearly at businesses that cut corners and at regulators who didn't do their jobs properly - if at all. There are no responses offered by either employers or authorities, though according to the text at the conclusion that wasn't for the want of asking, and so what we watch here really does seem to be a critique of the indefensible attitudes taken when profit is king. The archive effectively illustrates not just the hugely complex nature of these operations - not least as we see the vast volume of fish being processed in the Barents sea or the miles and miles of pipelines, valves and chimneys that constitute an oil refinery, and so it isn't hard to see how something could go wrong at the best of times, let alone after many years of neglect. The narration itself is a bit on the dry side, but there are some potent contributions here and it showcases quite strikingly how easy things can fail when safety if compromised."

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