Perch of the Devil
(2016, original release: 1960)

Nonfiction

eVideo

Provider: Kanopy

Details

DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 video file, approximately 25 minutes) : digital, .flv file, sound

ISBN/ISSN
1166379
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

In Process Record

Perch of the Devil is about the hard rock miners of Butte, Montana, and the strike of copper miners in 1959. The film reviews the history of the Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Local Union No. 1 and the many violent struggles that have happened in the mining camps of the western Rockies. There are interviews with miners, and with victims of silicosis, a fatal lung disease among miners. The film also contains footage of mining operations in tunnels a mile below the surface. Harvey Richards traveled to Butte, Montana in the 1959 when union organizers he knew agreed that making a film for the miner's cause could help in the strike effort against Anaconda Copper. Harvey Richards had recently refused to testify before the HUAC committee in 1957 and was under surveillance by the the FBI wherever he went. Nevertheless, he believed the film could be made and be useful in spite of government and company hostility towards dissent and union organization. He was followed around Butte, sometime by three police and FBI vehicles simultaneously. Neither Harvey nor the union organizers were intimidated by police tactics and the film was successfully completed in 1960 and used to support the last major strike in the copper mines. The strike was doomed because underground mining was doomed. Open pit mining replaced tunnel mining rapidly after 1960 (the Berkeley Pit in Butte opened in 1956), and with it, the underground miner's union faded into history. Perch of the Devil offers viewers today a glimpse into the minds and conditions of life of hard rock miners who played an important role in the industrialization of the continent and our way of life. It was one of the first films that Harvey Richards made and it set the stage for other primary source documentaries giving voice to the common people, workers and the oppressed

Title from title frames

Originally produced by Estuary Press in 1960

Mode of access: World Wide Web

In English

Additional Credits