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Strike: An Uncivil War

  • 2024
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
342
YOUR RATING
Strike: An Uncivil War (2024)
UK trailer - Strike: An Uncivil War
Play trailer2:36
1 Video
3 Photos
Documentary

The Miners' Strike of 1984/85 was the most divisive, violent industrial dispute Britain has ever witnessed. With personal testimony, formerly hidden government documents and unseen archive, ... Read allThe Miners' Strike of 1984/85 was the most divisive, violent industrial dispute Britain has ever witnessed. With personal testimony, formerly hidden government documents and unseen archive, STRIKE tells the story of the Battle of OrgreaveThe Miners' Strike of 1984/85 was the most divisive, violent industrial dispute Britain has ever witnessed. With personal testimony, formerly hidden government documents and unseen archive, STRIKE tells the story of the Battle of Orgreave

  • Director
    • Daniel Gordon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    342
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Daniel Gordon
    • 12User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    UK trailer - Strike: An Uncivil War
    Trailer 2:36
    UK trailer - Strike: An Uncivil War

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    User reviews12

    7.6342
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    Featured reviews

    6brycetaylor1955

    Missed opportunity

    The makers of this documentary have missed an opportunity to present a balanced view of the 1984 strike. The perspective of the miners is powerfully told, bringing to life the feelings of the miners and their communities, and the divisions between Nottinghamshire and other mining areas. The footage and eye witness accounts of the events at Orgreave tell a powerful story of politicized policing. What is skimmed over is that this strike was called without a ballot. Its aim was paralyze the electricity supply and steel industries, and inflict damage on a democratically elected government with no thought to the impact on other vulnerable citizens through power cuts etc. We needed to hear from the other side of the dispute. Also useful would have been some portrayal of the damage the trade union movement in general was inflicting on the prosperity of the country through the 70's and early 80's. This was a hugely important factor in the decision of the Thatcher government to "bend the rules" to defeat this strike.

    Powerful viewing, worth watching, but flawed by it's lack of balance.
    7elliotcmbambury

    A good documentary, some glaring omissions however

    Some really good interviews with ex miners and great footage, however it is very one sided in its politics ignoring the fact general strikes and flying pickets had been made illegal, it doesn't really go into how the country was being paralysed by mass striking, doesn't mention the 3 day week and the investigative journalists insinuate military tactics were being used by police in disorder such as baton guns which werent used, and state a change in police tactics needs to be voted on in parliment which is also incorrect

    Scargill's role in the strikes was mainly over looked.

    A shame as there is some really good stuff and is still definitely worth a watch purely for the eye witness accounts and footage.
    9anxiousgayhorseonketamine

    Excellent but ...

    This documentary is really well made it is extremely well made but it is entirely mythologizing the miners as some kind of special human group which others cannot possibly understand . The problem is here it is based entirely on a false premise Mrs Thatcher did not wage wars on the miners she had no interest in the miners the miners were lower-class people people she despised . In her worldview only the wealthy matter 45 years after she visited these shores the British Isles the place is destroyed shredded nobody under the age of 40 will ever be able to afford housing she turned houses into investment opportunities leaving the generations which come after unable to ever buy a home for themselves.

    She destroyed dental care which was free and available to all before she destroyed higher education she set the wheels in motion for privatization of practically everything public transport which used to be always average but adequate in the UK after coming to power became bit by bit more and more expensive more and more unreliable she is entirely to blame for all of this there are no positive aspects of Mrs Thatcher's in her time in power she was like Attila the Hun in a skirt .

    Now what we have to look at here is who was she really targeting she was not targeting the miners she was targeting Arthur Scargill and the unions she was targeting the power of the working class her entire time in power was class war she wanted to destroy and subjugate the bottom half of the population and she did that very very well people who admire her usually people in the top third of the of the earning population respect her for that she made the wealthy wealthier the same process was going on at the same time in the USA a country run at the time by an ijut called Ronald Reagan both of these people Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were in fact following the moronic writings of Milton Friedman and the Chicago School which is still followed in 2025 by the current Argentinian head of state. Okay moving back to the miners this shows communities of people in the north of England, Scotland, Kent, Wales, the northeast who were basically living in what looks to us now in 2025 like something out of a Dickensian period in little houses covered in coal dust working in jobs which were so dangerous and many examples are given here of people who died in the mines which really quite frankly you cannot have nostalgia for but they seem to they have that, kind of generations of slaves underground slaves the mistake that was made was not to shut down the mines the mistake that was made was to despise the human group there and therefore not find any replacement job-wise you cannot take away people's livelihood like that completely and do nothing about it this was inhuman inhumane this is where it showed the true evil witch character of the prime minister of the times

    Showing the guys getting back there in 2023 was interesting because you see them all probably around the age of 60 or something and they're all fairly well dressed they don't look like they lost you know everything in the war but they still are nostalgic for this which to anybody who doesn't do that job looks like absolutely unbearable conditions of work

    So the documentary here is extremely well put together interviewing some of the police people who were there some of them quite shocked by what they were asked to do showing the scam and the lies which them their management and the government forced them into you cannot possibly tell people that you brought three quarters of the police force of England and Wales and that you really meant to be dealing a fair treatment to the people targeted.

    After Arthur Scargill and the unions lost to Margaret Thatcher they lost in 1984 and they lost for good after attila the hun in a skirt went by the country was never the same again it is now all about money all about one-upmanship it's not quite the usa but it's trying hard to be I personally lived that entire period in the UK and to this day loath the woman absolutely profoundly loath the woman anybody who is interested in social rights in class struggle in social history will really like this but I still think it is slightly skewed as it is not naming the real enemy that she called "the enemy within" it was not the miners it was socialism she absolutely loathed socialism communism her favorite line was "there is no such thing as society" when you have that kind of belief you can destroy entire communities and not feel a thing and that is the kind of monster we were faced with in 1984 until her being kicked out on the 22nd of november 1990 a day I still celebrate 🙃😉
    9djftdxdf

    Still waiting for answers

    Couldn't help but compare this documentary to modern Britain. Forty years on and it's seems the government are using the same formula that Margaret Thatcher used all those years ago.

    The documentary is told by the miners who are still waiting for answers. I found it incredibly raw and quite harrowing at times. Hearing how communities were ripped apart and how families lives have never been the same since made it difficult to watch at times.

    The documentary made me think that the agenda back then is very, very similar to what's happening in our country now. The government Vs the working class.
    7rebeccat-37865

    Keeping it safely away from politics

    I was pleased but surprised to find this unheralded documentary showing at my local Vue multiplex and attended a screening that attracted one other viewer. There have been several recent, quite unsympathetic docs on the strike so I was curious as to how this one would treat it.

    The perspective is from miners themselves rather than from their former leaders or from commentators, apart from one BBC reporters at the time and a former policeman. That helps ground it into a working-class context, but I was less happy to be denied the necessary political context: where was the Labour party in this? It does mention the TUC's total lack of support but strangely portrays Scargill as no more than a rabble-rouser, out of his depth and outmanoeuvred by canny Conservative operators like Thatcher.

    The coverage of the Orgreave battle between miners in a field near the coking plant and many thousands of uniformed police doesn't reveal anything new. The lack of serious injuries makes it appear more like a slightly riotous festival, certainly compared to the Marikana massacre in South Africa in 2012 in which 34 miners were murdered by the police.

    In general, the film lacked a serious political analysis. But its presentation of the deep solidarity in mining communities, and how that was purposely destroyed by the Conservative government with the connivance of a right-wing Labour 'opposition', showed how much we have lost.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 21, 2024 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Production companies
      • Embankment Films
      • VeryMuchSo Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

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    • Budget
      • $1,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $31,126
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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