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North Country

  • 2005
  • R
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
46K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,779
193
Charlize Theron in North Country (2005)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer0:31
14 Videos
93 Photos
Legal DramaWorkplace DramaDrama

A fictionalized account of the first major successful sexual harassment case in the United States, Jenson vs. Eveleth Mines, where a woman who endured a range of abuse while working as a min... Read allA fictionalized account of the first major successful sexual harassment case in the United States, Jenson vs. Eveleth Mines, where a woman who endured a range of abuse while working as a miner filed and won the landmark 1984 lawsuit.A fictionalized account of the first major successful sexual harassment case in the United States, Jenson vs. Eveleth Mines, where a woman who endured a range of abuse while working as a miner filed and won the landmark 1984 lawsuit.

  • Director
    • Niki Caro
  • Writers
    • Michael Seitzman
    • Clara Bingham
    • Laura Leedy
  • Stars
    • Charlize Theron
    • Jeremy Renner
    • Frances McDormand
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    46K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,779
    193
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Michael Seitzman
      • Clara Bingham
      • Laura Leedy
    • Stars
      • Charlize Theron
      • Jeremy Renner
      • Frances McDormand
    • 235User reviews
    • 139Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 5 wins & 20 nominations total

    Videos14

    North Country
    Trailer 0:31
    North Country
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    Clip 1:27
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    Clip 1:27
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    North Country Scene: I'm Still A Member Of This Union
    Clip 1:16
    North Country Scene: I'm Still A Member Of This Union
    North Country Scene: She's Still My Daughter
    Clip 1:16
    North Country Scene: She's Still My Daughter
    North Country Scene: Why Do You Think I Hired You
    Clip 1:01
    North Country Scene: Why Do You Think I Hired You
    North Country Scene: I Don't Hate The Whole World
    Clip 0:49
    North Country Scene: I Don't Hate The Whole World

    Photos93

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    + 87
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    Top cast75

    Edit
    Charlize Theron
    Charlize Theron
    • Josey Aimes
    Jeremy Renner
    Jeremy Renner
    • Bobby Sharp
    Frances McDormand
    Frances McDormand
    • Glory
    Thomas Curtis
    • Sammy Aimes
    Elle Peterson
    Elle Peterson
    • Karen Aimes
    Sean Bean
    Sean Bean
    • Kyle
    Woody Harrelson
    Woody Harrelson
    • Bill White
    Richard Jenkins
    Richard Jenkins
    • Hank Aimes
    Sissy Spacek
    Sissy Spacek
    • Alice Aimes
    James Cada
    • Don Pearson
    Rusty Schwimmer
    Rusty Schwimmer
    • Big Betty
    Linda Emond
    Linda Emond
    • Leslie Conlin
    Michelle Monaghan
    Michelle Monaghan
    • Sherry
    Brad William Henke
    Brad William Henke
    • Lattavansky
    Jillian Armenante
    Jillian Armenante
    • Peg
    Amber Heard
    Amber Heard
    • Young Josey
    John Aylward
    John Aylward
    • Judge Halsted
    Xander Berkeley
    Xander Berkeley
    • Arlen Pavich
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Michael Seitzman
      • Clara Bingham
      • Laura Leedy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews235

    7.346.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7filipemanuelneto

    A very acceptable melodrama that focuses on the fight against gender discrimination.

    This film addresses the first case of success in which a group of female workers won the firm in court in a class action of harassment and sexual discrimination. Everything happens in the mines of Minnesota but, over a real case, director Niki Caro and screenwriter Michael Seitzman decided to create a deeply melodramatic story centered on the figure of a young woman, mother of two children from different parents and with a past marred by rape and a bad marriage. She becomes the main target of the jokes, obscene gestures and provocations of the miners, who feel that women are stealing jobs from men. The story is very emotional but works well anyway. An interesting point is that, even when things are tense, the two sides are not defined by their sex, that is, even in those moments there are women who are not in favor of complaining, just as there are men who don't approve of the rude and coarse attitudes of their fellows. This allows the public to understand that the issue is not men vs. women, goes far beyond mere sexism.

    Charlize Theron is a good actress but seems visually too young for the character sometimes. Anyway, she managed to shine. Richard Jenkins has been OK but acts in a predictable way. Frances McDormand did very well, especially in the final half of the movie, where she really shows talent. Jeremy Renner manages to be truly despicable as the villain. Technically regular, it's a good movie and it deserves to be watched.
    8leilapostgrad

    Austin Movie Show review...

    This is the kind of drama that breaks your heart over and over again without a moment to recover. It's NOT an easy film to watch. But that's what makes North Country so extraordinary. Charlize Theron plays Josey Aimes, a young mother who leaves her abusive husband and returns to her hometown to start a new life and support herself and her two kids. Almost immediately, we learn that this is a woman who has been judged, criticized, and ostracized and called a "whore" ever since she became pregnant in high school. Josey takes a job at the local mine because it's the best paying job she can find, and she's determined to give her kids a comfortable life. She and her female co-workers are reminded every day how unwanted and unwelcome they are at the mine. They are physically, verbally, mentally, and sexually abused on a daily basis. After being physically attacked and threatened, Josey quits and starts to fight back by suing the company for sexual harassment.

    I was finally pushed over the "tears threshold" when Josey's dad stands up at the miners' union meeting and defends his daughter for the first time in her life. After that, I was sobbing on and off for the entire duration of the film. While the entire cast is perfect, I believe the Best Supporting Actress Nomination must go to Frances McDormand who injects some much-needed comic relief into this bleak-but-brave story. Movies about rape and abuse are never easy to watch, but North Country is such an important story to hear. We as women need to be reminded that women before us suffered and fought for what we take for granted today.
    8Tony-Kiss-Castillo

    NORTH COUNTRY = INHOSPITABLE COUNTRY FOR WOMEN

    NOTRH COUNTRY is stark proof that truth is stranger than fiction!

    BUT FIRST... Let us FOCUS on the Title´s Content and Context:

    The Director, New-Zealander Niki Caro (Whale Rider), perhaps a very apt directorial choice, being a woman, yet at the same time, precisely not being American! In the mines of Minnesota in 1989, only 3% of the workers are women. There is a whole confluence of constantly orchestrated pressure applied against all female miners intended to get them to resign.

    Charlize Theron (Who won the Oscar for best actress in MONSTER in the role of the only female serial-killer in U. S. history, Florida's Aileen Wuornos) as expected, is absolutely magnificent as Josey Aimes, a woman whose only motivation is wanting to provide a better life for her two children. The fight is quite a tough one for Josey. At first, everyone seems clearly to be set against her. Neither her friends, nor his parents, not even her own children give her their support! But Josey is a very stubborn human being who does not permit anything or anyone to discourage her.

    Gradually, her unshakeable character, her unparalleled courage and the enormity of the injustice committed against her finally begin working in her favor.

    NORTH COUNTRY at times does exhibit some rather lethargic moments, but the cast and the quality of the story are so outstanding that is easy to overlook this minor flaw!

    Frances McDormand (1996 Oscar winner for FARGO) also shines in the multifaceted role of best friend; coworker, representing women's interests among union workers and victim of one of the worst evils occasionally affecting mine workers: Lung Cancer! Woody Harrelson (Natural Born Killers) is convincing as the ex-football player town hero turned lawyer who takes on Josey's case. Sissy Spacek (Carrie: original version) as the dutiful Mom and Richard Jenkins (Six Feet Under) as the skeptical dad.

    Almost everyone who works or has worked recently in the United States knows that the problem of sexual harassment in the workplace is something that is taken extremely seriously. This is thanks, in large part, to Josey Aimes, and the struggle she was forced to wage against that Minnesota mining company 30 years ago! It is really worth traveling to NORTH COUNTRY to see both Charlize Theron's and Frances McDormand's Oscar Nomination performances!

    ...ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA!

    Any Comments, Questions or Observations.... in ENGLISH... o en ESPAÑOL... are most Welcome!
    8Aimee-myers-143-48312

    Important to have open mind

    This is an important film about more than just Sexual harassment. It is more than a movie about Women. This movie deals with true courage. About the possibility just one person can accomplish!!! It's about taking a stand, and knowing right from wrong!!

    This movie was very tastefully done. It features a A list cast. With A list acting. It tackles a very important and very necessary message.

    I'm rather puzzled with some of the reviews. However, to each their own.

    I found the movie was well acted and well done.

    I also found the ending to be perfect!!!
    6bm317

    An important issue dumbed and numbed

    I hate to give North Country a relatively low vote because this is such an important issue, and I appreciate the good intentions of director Niki Caro, and the A-list actors who no doubt took a big pay cut when agreeing to take a role.

    On the other hand, I feel disappointed, a little angry, as well as insulted as a woman that this hugely important story was made into a melodrama that flattens out what really happened, and somehow manages to diminish the political nature of sexual harassment, even while seeming to highlight it.

    At least 90 percent of the problem had to do with Michael Seitzman's script.

    In the interview with Seitzman on the DVD, he makes clear that he didn't think the sexual harassment story was the real story. The real story, he said, was the traumatic experience Josie had in high school, and her relationship with her son.

    Therefore he should have written a script for Lifetime focusing on what he felt was the "real story". He should not have used one of the most important cases for sexual harassment in legal history as the vehicle for telling this other story.

    The producers should have demanded a script that more closely resembled Susannah Grant's Erin Brockovich. The sequence of victimization after victimization depicted in North Country didn't let us get to know Josie's character in any depth. We saw her slammed against the wall again and again, from beginning to end. We see that she stands up against the oppression, but we aren't taken into her sensibility, her choices, her process, her blind spots, character change, etc, etc, like in EB. Likewise, the lack of complexity in the male "macho" characters also flattens the story, and takes away from the real difficulties in challenging sexism and sexual harassment. In real life, character complexity of those who oppress or who defend oppressors is part of what makes the problem of sexual harassment difficult to fight.

    I read an interview with Niki Caro, and though I think she's a very talented director, I got the sense that she didn't really get the politics or history behind sexual harassment. It seems things aren't as bad in New Zealand as they are here in the U.S. This is a foreign culture to her, and Northern Minnesota is certainly a foreign culture. I wish she would have spent more time fully understanding the issues and cultural dynamics (including the accent and mannerisms of the area, etc, which were sprinkled into the movie, but not rigorously replicated) before undertaking the project. If she had gone the extra mile to immerse herself in the issue and the region, perhaps she would have demanded a total rewrite of the script.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Josey Aimes is based on Lois Jenson, who started working in the mines in 1975 and endured thirteen years of harassment before filing her first lawsuit. Jenson v. Eveleth Mines was settled in 1998, ten years after it was first filed, and over twenty years after the harassment began.
    • Goofs
      The movie is set in 1988-89, yet it frequently shows the Clarence Thomas/Anita Hill hearings, which occurred in 1991.
    • Quotes

      Hank Aimes: My name is Hank Aimes and I've been a miner all my life. And I've never been ashamed of it until now. You know when we take our wives and daughters to the company barbecue, I don't hear any of them calling them those names like bitches and whores and worse. I don't see anyone grab them by their privates or drawing pictures of them on the bathroom walls, it's unspeakable. Unspeakable! So what's changed? She's still my daughter! It's a heck of a thing, to watch one of your own get treated that way. You're all supposed to be my friends, my brothers. Well, right now I don't have a friend in this room. In fact the only one I'm not ashamed of is my daughter.

    • Crazy credits
      The Warner Bros. logo plays but with no music.
    • Connections
      Featured in HBO First Look: North Country (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Antone's Polka
      Written by Matt Vorderbruggen

      Performed by The Matt Vorderbruggen Band

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 21, 2005 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Warner Bros (France)
      • Warner Bros. (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tierra fría
    • Filming locations
      • Chisholm, Minnesota, USA
    • Production companies
      • Warner Bros.
      • Industry Entertainment
      • Participant
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $35,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $18,337,722
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,422,455
      • Oct 23, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $25,211,175
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 6 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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