Happy 2012!
You might have some extra time to watch a movie or two during the new year holidays. Here is a list I complied which I consider as the top 100 socially conscience movies of all time. Enjoy
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  La commune (Paris, 1871)   For Whom the Bell Tolls     Guilty by Suspicion   Z    
                           
                           
      Cover to the first edition
 
 
 
 
 
   
  Directed by Peter Watkins                
  Written by Agathe Bluysen   First edition cover     Promotional movie poster for the film     Theatrical poster      
    Peter Watkins   Directed by Irwin Winkler   Directed by Costa Gavras    
  Cinematography Odd-Geir Sæther   Country United States   Produced by Steven Reuther   Produced by Jacques Perrin    
  Editing by Agathe Bluysen   Language English     Alan C. Blomquist     Ahmed Rachedi    
    Patrick Watkins   Genre(s) War novel     Nelson McCormick   Screenplay by Jorge Semprún    
    Peter Watkins   Publisher Charles Scribner's Sons     Arnon Milchan     Costa Gavras    
  Release date(s) Germany:   During the Spanish Civil War,
an American allied with
the Republicans finds romance
during a desperate
mission to blow up a
strategically important bridge
Director: Sam Wood
Writers: Ernest Hemingway(novel)
Dudley Nichols (screenplay)
Stars: Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman
and Akim Tamiroff
1940   Written by Irwin Winkler   Story by Vassilis Vassilikos    
    26 May 2000 (TV premiere)         Starring Robert De Niro   Starring Jean-Louis Trintignant    
    United States:   Pages 471 pp     Annette Bening     Yves Montand    
    37805   ISBN 978-0-684-83048-3 (Scribner's reprint)     George Wendt     Irene Papas    
    France:   OCLC Number 34475606     Sam Wanamaker     Jacques Perrin    
    39393   Dewey Decimal 813/.52 20     Martin Scorsese   Music by Mikis Theodorakis    
  Running time 345 min.   LC Classification PS3515.E37 F6 1996   Music by James Newton Howard   Cinematography Raoul Coutard    
    220 min. (theatrical cut)   Preceded by The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories   Cinematography Michael Ballhaus   Editing by Françoise Bonnot    
  Country France   Followed by Across the River and into the Trees   Editing by Priscilla Nedd-Friendly   Distributed by Cinema V (US)    
  Language French       Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures   Release date(s) February 26, 1969(France)    
        Release date(s) 33312   Running time 127 minutes    
      Running time 105 minutes   Country Algeria    
      Country United States/France     France    
      Language English   Language French    
  Dead Man Walking   The Insider      
Spartacus
                                                       
 
 
   
 
   
 
         
  Theatrical release poster   Theatrical poster     The Grapes of Wrath   Theatrical release poster by Reynold Brown    
  Directed by Tim Robbins   Directed by Michael Mann         Directed by Stanley Kubrick    
  Produced by Tim Robbins   Produced by Pieter Jan Brugge   Theatrical release poster   Anthony Mann (uncredited)    
    Jon Kilik     Michael Mann   Directed by John Ford   Produced by Edward Lewis    
    Rudd Simmon   Written by Marie Brenner   Produced by Darryl F. Zanuck   Kirk Douglas (executive)    
  Written by Tim Robbins     Eric Roth     Nunnally Johnson   Screenplay by Dalton Trumbo    
  Based on Dead Man Walking by     Michael Mann   Screenplay by Nunnally Johnson   Based on Spartacus by    
    Sister Helen Prejean C.S.J.   Starring Al Pacino   Based on The Grapes of Wrath by   Howard Fast    
  Starring Susan Sarandon     Russell Crowe     John Steinbeck   Narrated by Vic Perrin    
    Sean Penn     Christopher Plummer   Starring Henry Fonda   Starring Kirk Douglas    
    Robert Prosky     Diane Venora     Jane Darwell   Laurence Olivier    
    Lois Smith     Roger Bart     John Carradine   Peter Ustinov    
    Jack Black     Rip Torn     Shirley Mills   John Gavin    
    Celia Weston     Bruce McGill     John Qualen   Jean Simmons    
  Music by David Robbins     Michael Gambon     Eddie Quillan   Charles Laughton    
  Cinematography Roger A. Deakins     Gina Gershon   Music by Alfred Newman   Tony Curtis    
  Editing by Lisa Zeno Churgin     Philip Baker Hall   Cinematography Gregg Toland   Music by Alex North    
  Studio PolyGram Filmed Entertainment     Paul Perri   Editing by Robert L. Simpson   Cinematography Russell Metty    
    Working Title Films   Music by Pieter Bourke   Distributed by 20th Century Fox   Stanley Kubrick (uncredited)    
  Distributed by Gramercy Pictures     Lisa Gerrard   Release date(s) 14634   Editing by Robert Lawrence    
  Release date(s) 35062     Graeme Revell   Running time 129 minutes   Distributed by Universal Pictures    
  Running time 122 minutes   Cinematography Dante Spinotti   Country United States   Release date(s) 07-Oct-60    
  Country United States   Editing by William Goldenberg   Language English   Running time 184 minutes    
  Language English     David Rosenbloom   Budget 750000   Country United States    
  Budget $11 million     Paul Rubell         Language English    
  Gross revenue 86387284   Distributed by Touchstone Pictures         Budget $12 million    
        Release date(s) 36469         Gross revenue $60,000,000    
        Running time 157 minutes                
        Country United States                
        Language English                
        Budget $68 million                
        Gross revenue $60,289,912                
  Il Postino   MASH   Human Trafficking   An Inconvenient Truth                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
  A movie poster displays industrial smoke stacks whose emissions form a hurricane eyewall
 
   
  Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster   Original release U.S. DVD cover art   Promotional poster for An Inconvenient Truthdesigned by The Ant Farm[1]    
  Directed by Michael Radford   Directed by Robert Altman   Genre Drama   Directed by Davis Guggenheim    
  Produced by Mario Cecchi Gori   Produced by Ingo Preminger   Crime   Produced by Lawrence Bender    
  Vittorio Cecchi Gori   Screenplay by Ring Lardner, Jr.   Directed by Christian Duguay   Scott Z. Burns    
  Gaetano Daniele   Based on MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors by   Written by Carol Doyle   Laurie David    
  Starring Philippe Noiret   Richard Hooker   Agatha Dominik   Co-Producer & Line Producer:    
  Massimo Troisi   Starring Donald Sutherland   Starring Mira Sorvino   Lesley Chilcott    
  Maria Grazia Cucinotta   Elliot Gould   Donald Sutherland   Executive Producer:    
  Music by Luis Enríquez Bacalov   Tom Skerritt   Robert Carlyle   Jeffrey D. Ivers    
  Distributed by Miramax Films   Sally Kellerman   Remy Girard   Jeff Skoll    
  Release date(s) September 1, 1994 (VFF)   Robert Duvall   Music by Normand Corbiel   Ricky Strauss    
  September 22, 1994 (Italy)   Rene Auberjonois   Editing by Gaetan Hout   Diane Weyermann    
  June 14, 1995 (United States)   Michael Murphy   Sylvain Lebel   Written by Al Gore (teleplay)    
  Running time 108 minutes   Music by Johnny Mandel   Country Canada   Starring Al Gore    
  Country Italy   Cinematography Harold E. Stine   Language English   Music by Michael Brook    
  Language Italian   Editing by Danford B. Greene   Original channel Lifetime Television   Cinematography Davis Guggenheim    
  Gross revenue $21,848,932   Studio Aspen Productions   Original run October 24 – October 25, 2005   Bob Richman    
        Ingo Preminger Productions   Running time 176 minutes   Editing by Jay Cassidy    
        Distributed by 20th Century Fox         Dan Swietlik    
        Release date(s) 25-Jan-70         Studio Lawrence Bender Productions    
        Running time 116 minutes         Participant Productions    
        Country United States         Distributed by Paramount Classics    
        Language English         Release date(s) 24-May-06    
        Budget $3.5 million         Running time 94 minutes    
        Gross revenue $81,600,000         Country United States    
                    Language English    
                    Budget US$+1,000,000[2]    
                    Gross revenue US$49,756,507[3]    
                    (worldwide)    
  Land and Freedom  
Taxi Driver
  Burn!   The Chase                                                        
 
 
     
 
 
 
   
  Movie poster from Ken Loach's Land and Freedom   Theatrical release poster   Directed by Gillo Pontecorvo   Original film poster by Howard Terpning    
  Directed by Ken Loach   Directed by Martin Scorsese   Produced by Alberto Grimaldi   Directed by Arthur Penn    
  Produced by Rebecca O'Brien   Produced by Julia Phillips   Written by Franco Solinas   Produced by Sam Spiegel    
  Written by Jim Allen   Michael Phillips   Giorgio Arlorio   Written by Horton Foote (play "The Chase")    
  Starring Ian Hart   Written by Paul Schrader   Starring Marlon Brando   Lillian Hellmanscreenplay (Spiegel had it rewritten)    
  Cinematography Barry Ackroyd   Narrated by Robert De Niro   Evaristo Márquez   Starring Marlon Brando    
  Editing by Jonathan Morris   Starring Robert De Niro   Music by Ennio Morricone   Jane Fonda    
  Studio PolyGram Filmed Entertainment   Jodie Foster   Cinematography Marcello Gatti   Robert Redford    
  Distributed by Gramercy Pictures   Albert Brooks   Studio Europee Associate SAS   E. G. Marshall    
  Release date(s) 6 October, 1995   Harvey Keitel   Produzioni Europee Associati   Angie Dickinson    
  Running time 109 minutes   Leonard Harris   Distributed by United Artists   Music by John Barry    
  Country United Kingdom   Peter Boyle   Release date(s) 1969   Cinematography Joseph LaShelle &Robert Surtees(uncredited)    
  Spain   Cybill Shepherd   Running time 112 min (U.S.)   Editing by Gene Milford    
  Germany   Music by Bernard Herrmann         Studio Horizon Pictures    
  Italy   Cinematography Michael Chapman         Distributed by Columbia Pictures    
  Language English   Editing by Tom Rolf         Release date(s) 19-Feb-66    
  Spanish   Melvin Shapiro         Running time 133 minutes    
  Catalan   Studio Columbia Pictures         Country United States    
        Bill/Phillips         Language English    
        Italo/Judeo Productions                
        Distributed by Columbia Pictures                
        Release date(s) 08-Feb-76                
        Running time 113 minutes                
        Country United States                
        Language English                
        Budget $1.3 million                
        Gross revenue $28,262,574                
  A Dry White Season   Three Days of the Condor   The Young Lions   A Civil Action                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  Film poster   Theatrical poster   Theatrical Poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Directed by Euzhan Palcy   Directed by Sydney Pollack   Directed by Edward Dmytryk   Directed by Steven Zaillian    
  Produced by Paula Weinstein   Produced by Dino De Laurentiis   Produced by Al Lichtman   Produced by Scott Rudin    
  Tim Hampton   Written by James Grady (novel)   Written by Edward Anhalt   Steven Zaillian    
  Mary Selway   Lorenzo Semple Jr.   Starring Marlon Brando   David Wisnievi    
  Written by Colin Welland   David Rayfiel   Montgomery Clift   Robert Redford    
  Euzhan Palcy   Starring Robert Redford   Dean Martin   Rachel Pfeffer    
  Robert Bolt (uncredited)   Faye Dunaway   Hope Lange   David McGiffert    
  André Brink (novel)   Cliff Robertson   May Britt   Henry J. Golas    
  Starring Donald Sutherland   Max von Sydow   Maximilian Schell   Written by Steven Zaillian    
  Janet Suzman   Music by Dave Grusin   Music by Hugo Friedhofer   Based on A Civil Action by    
  Jürgen Prochnow   Cinematography Owen Roizman   Cinematography Joseph MacDonald   Jonathan Harr    
  Zakes Mokae   Editing by Don Guidice   Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox   Starring John Travolta    
  with Susan Sarandon   Fredric Steinkamp(supervising)   Release date(s) 1958   Robert Duvall    
  and Marlon Brando   Distributed by Paramount Pictures   Running time 167 minutes   Tony Shalhoub    
  Music by Dave Grusin   Release date(s) 24-Sep-75         William H. Macy    
  Cinematography Pierre-William Glenn   Running time 118 min.         Zeljko Ivanek    
  Kelvin Pike   Country United States         Bruce Norris    
  Editing by Glenn Cunningham   Language English         John Lithgow    
  Sam O'Steen   French         Kathleen Quinlan    
  Distributed by MGM               Peter Jacobson    
  Release date(s) 22-Sep-89               Mary Mara    
  Running time 97 minutes               James Gandolfini    
  Language English               Stephen Fry    
                    Howie Carr    
                    Kathy Bates    
                    Music by Danny Elfman    
                    Cinematography Conrad L. Hall    
                    Editing by Wayne Wahrman    
                    Distributed by USA/Canada    
                    Touchstone Pictures    
                    International    
                    Paramount Pictures    
                    Release date(s) 25-Dec-98    
                    Running time 115 minutes    
                    Country United States    
                    Language English    
                    Budget $75 million    
                    Gross revenue $56,709,981    
 
Modern Times
 
Missing
  Born on the Fourth of July  
Running on Empty
                                                       
         
 
       
  Directed by Charlie Chaplin   Directed by Costa-Gavras   original film poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Produced by Charlie Chaplin   Produced by Edward Lewis   Directed by Oliver Stone   Directed by Sidney Lumet    
  Written by Charlie Chaplin   Mildred Lewis   Produced by A. Kitman Ho   Produced by Griffin Dunne    
  Paulette Goddard(uncredited)   Written by Donald E. Stewart   Oliver Stone   Amy Robinson    
  Starring Charlie Chaplin   Costa-Gavras   Written by Oliver Stone   Written by Naomi Foner    
  Paulette Goddard   Thomas Hauser (book)   Ron Kovic   Starring River Phoenix    
  Henry Bergman   Starring Jack Lemmon   Starring Tom Cruise   Judd Hirsch    
  Stanley Sandford   Sissy Spacek   Kyra Sedgwick   Christine Lahti    
  Chester Conklin   Melanie Mayron   Raymond J. Barry   Martha Plimpton    
  Music by Charlie Chaplin   John Shea   Jerry Levine   Music by Tony Mottola    
  Cinematography Ira H. Morgan   Janice Rule   Frank Whaley   Cinematography Gerry Fisher    
  Roland Totheroh   Music by Vangelis   Willem Dafoe   Editing by Andrew Mondshein    
  Editing by Williard Nico   Cinematography Ricardo Aronovich   Music by John Williams   Distributed by Warner Bros.    
  Distributed by United Artists (1930s-2003) MK2 Editions(2003-2010) Janus Films/Criterion (2010-present)   Editing by Françoise Bonnot   Editing by Joe Hutshing   Release date(s) 09-Sep-88    
  Release date(s) 05-Feb-36   Studio PolyGram Filmed Entertainment   David Brenner   Running time 111 minutes    
  Running time 87 minutes   Distributed by Universal Pictures   Distributed by Universal Pictures   Country United States    
  Language English   Release date(s) 12-Feb-82   Release date(s) 20-Dec-89   Language English    
  Budget $1,500,000 (est.)   Running time 122 minutes   Running time 145 minutes   Gross revenue $2,835,116    
  Gross revenue $8.5 Million   Country United States   Country United States          
        Language English   Language English          
        Spanish   Budget $14 million          
              Gross revenue $161,001,698          
  The Commitments   Apocalypse Now   Monty Python's Life of Brian   Papillon                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  Theatrical release poster   theatrical release poster by Bob Peak
Directed by
Terry Jones   Theatrical release poster by Richard Amsel    
  Directed by Alan Parker   Directed by Francis Ford Coppola Produced by ·                     Exec. prod:   Directed by Franklin J. Schaffner    
  Produced by Lynda Myles   Produced by Francis Ford Coppola ·                     George Harrison   Produced by Ted Richmond    
  Roger Randall-Cutler[1]   Screenplay by John Milius ·                     Denis O'Brien   Written by Henri Charrière    
  Written by Dick Clement   Francis Ford Coppola ·                     Producer:   Dalton Trumbo    
  Ian La Frenais   Michael Herr (narration) ·                     John Goldstone   Starring Steve McQueen    
  Roddy Doyle   Story by Joseph Conrad (novel) Written by ·                     Graham Chapman   Dustin Hoffman    
  Starring Robert Arkins   Narrated by Joe Estevez (uncredited) ·                     John Cleese   Music by Jerry Goldsmith    
  Colm Meaney   Starring Martin Sheen ·                     Terry Gilliam   Editing by Robert Swink    
  Andrew Strong   Marlon Brando ·                     Eric Idle   Distributed by Allied Artists Pictures Corporation (USA)    
  Maria Doyle   Robert Duvall ·                     Terry Jones   Columbia Pictures (Non-USA)    
  Music by Wilson Pickett   Laurence Fishburne ·                     Michael Palin   Release date(s) 16-Dec-73    
  Percy Sledge   Dennis Hopper Starring ·                     Graham Chapman   Running time 150 minutes    
  Cinematography Gale Tattersall   Harrison Ford ·                     John Cleese   Country United States    
  Editing by Gerry Hambling   Frederic Forrest ·                     Terry Gilliam   Language English    
  Studio Beacon Communications   Sam Bottoms ·                     Eric Idle   Budget $12 million    
  Distributed by 20th Century Fox   Albert Hall ·                     Terry Jones          
  Release date(s) 14-Aug-91   Music by Carmine Coppola ·                     Michael Palin          
  Running time 118 minutes   Francis Ford Coppola Music by Geoffrey Burgon          
  Country Ireland   Cinematography Vittorio Storaro Cinematography Peter Biziou          
  United Kingdom   Editing by Richard Marks Editing by Julian Doyle          
  United States   Gerald B. Greenberg Studio HandMade Films          
  Language English   Walter Murch Distributed by Orion Pictures thruWarner          
  Gross revenue $14,919,570   Lisa Fruchtman  Bros. Pictures           
        Studio American Zoetrope Release date(s) 17-Aug-79          
        Distributed by United Artists (1979 Theatrical Version) Running time 94 minutes          
        Paramount Pictures(Redux Version) Country United Kingdom          
        Lionsgate (Blu-ray) Language English          
        Miramax Films (Redux International Version) Budget $4 million[1]          
        Release date(s) 15-Aug-79 Gross revenue $20,045,115[2          
        Running time 153 minutes (Redux: 202 minutes)              
        Country United States              
        Language English              
        Budget $31.5 million              
        Gross revenue $78,784,010 (1979)              
  I Want to Live!   Dr. Strangelove or:   Crash   Not Without My Daughter                                                        
 
 
 
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
 
 
 
 
   
  Theatrical release poster       Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Directed by Robert Wise   Original film poster by Tomi Ungerer   Directed by Paul Haggis   Directed by Brian Gilbert    
  Produced by Claude Miller   Directed by Stanley Kubrick   Produced by Paul Haggis   Produced by Harry J. Ufland    
  Marcel Berbert   Produced by Stanley Kubrick   Don Cheadle   Written by Betty Mahmoody    
  Written by Screenplay:   Written by Stanley Kubrick   Bob Yari   William Hoffer    
  Nelson Gidding   Peter George   Cathy Schulman   David W. Rintels    
  Don Mankiewicz   Terry Southern   Screenplay by Paul Haggis   Starring Sally Field    
  Articles:   Uncredited:   Bobby Moresco   Alfred Molina    
  Ed Montgomery   Peter Sellers   Story by Paul Haggis   Sheila Rosenthal    
  Letters:   James B. Harris   Starring Sandra Bullock   Roshan Seth    
  Barbara Graham   Based on Red Alert by   Don Cheadle   Sarah Badel    
  Starring Susan Hayward   Peter George   Matt Dillon   Mony Rey    
  Simon Oakland   Starring Peter Sellers   Jennifer Esposito   Georges Corraface    
  Virginia Vincent   George C. Scott   William Fichtner   Music by Jerry Goldsmith    
  Theodore Bikel   Sterling Hayden   Brendan Fraser   Cinematography Peter Hannan    
  Music by Johnny Mandel   Keenan Wynn   Terrence Howard   Editing by Terry Rawlings    
  Cinematography Lionel Lindon   Slim Pickens   Chris "Ludacris" Bridges   Ofer Bedarshi (video)    
  Editing by William Hornbeck   Music by Laurie Johnson   Thandie Newton   Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer    
  Distributed by United Artists   Cinematography Gilbert Taylor   Ryan Phillippe   Release date(s) January 11, 1991 (USA)    
  Release date(s) 18-Nov-58   Editing by Anthony Harvey   Larenz Tate   August 2, 1991(Australia)    
  Running time 120 minutes   Studio Hawk Films   Michael Peña   Running time 116 min.    
  Country United States   Distributed by Columbia Pictures   Shaun Toub   Country United States    
  Language English   Release date(s) 29-Jan-64   Music by Mark Isham   Language English    
        Running time 94 minutes   Cinematography J. Michael Muro   Persian    
        Language English   Editing by Hughes Winborne          
        Budget US$1.8 million   Studio Lions Gate Films, Yari Film Group          
        Gross revenue $9,164,370 (US)   DEJ Productions          
              Distributed by Lions Gate Films (USA)          
              Pathé (UK)          
              Release date(s) September 10, 2004(TIFF)          
              06-May-05          
              Running time 112 minutes          
              Country United States          
              Germany          
              Language English          
              Spanish          
              Persian          
              Mandarin Chinese          
              Korean          
              Budget $6.5 million          
              Gross revenue $98,410,061          
  Asfour Stah
 
Asfour Stah (1990) More at IMDbPro »   All the President's Men   October:  
Reds
                                                       
  A coming-of-age comedy/drama set in Tunisia. Twelve-year-old Noura is an impressionable boy who must learn to reconcile two conflicting worlds - the loving world of Moslem women and the vastly different, harsher world of men - while also dealing with his own budding sexuality. Written by Dawn M. Barclift  
 
 
Ten Days That Shook the World
       
      Theatrical release poster       movie poster    
        Directed by Alan J. Pakula   Film poster   Directed by Warren Beatty    
        Produced by Walter Coblenz   Directed by Grigori Aleksandrov   Produced by Warren Beatty    
        Written by William Goldman   Sergei Eisenstein   Screenplay by Warren Beatty    
        Robert Redford(uncredited)   Written by Grigori Aleksandrov   Trevor Griffiths    
        Alan J. Pakula (uncredited)   Sergei Eisenstein   Uncredited:    
        Based on All the President's Men byBob Woodward andCarl Bernstein   John Silas Reed (book)   Elaine May    
        Starring Robert Redford   Starring Vladimir Popov   Jeremy Pikser    
        Dustin Hoffman   Vasili Nikandrov   Peter S. Feibleman    
        Jason Robards   Layaschenko   Starring Warren Beatty    
        Jack Warden   Music by Dimitri Shostakovich   Diane Keaton    
        Hal Holbrook   Cinematography Vladimir Nilsen   Jack Nicholson    
        Jane Alexander   Vladimir Popov   Paul Sorvino    
        Martin Balsam   Eduard Tisse   Maureen Stapleton    
        Music by David Shire   Release date(s) Soviet Union
 20 January 1928
  Gene Hackman    
        Cinematography Gordon Willis   United States
 2 November 1928 (NYC only)
  Edward Herrmann    
        Editing by Robert L. Wolfe   Running time 104min (Sweden)   Music by Stephen Sondheim    
        Distributed by Warner Bros.   95 min (USA)   Dave Grusin    
        Release date(s) 04-Apr-76   Country Soviet Union   Cinematography Vittorio Storaro    
        Running time 138 minutes   Language Silent film   Editing by Dede Allen    
        Country United States   Russian (original intertitles)   Craig McKay    
        Language English         Studio Barclays Mercantile Industrial Finance    
        Budget $8.5 million         JRS Productions    
        Gross revenue $70.6 million (United States)         Distributed by Paramount Pictures    
                    Release date(s) 04-Dec-81    
                    Running time 194 minutes    
                    Country United States    
                    Language English    
                    Russian    
                    German    
                    Budget $32 million    
                    Gross revenue $40,382,659    
  The Stoning of Soraya M.  
The Corporation
  Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media  
Roger & Me
                                                       
 
(.سنگسار ثريا م)
     
 
       
      Theatrical release poster   Film poster   Film poster    
  American theatrical release poster   Directed by Mark Achbar   Directed by Mark Achbar   Directed by Michael Moore    
  Directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh   Jennifer Abbott   Peter Wintonick   Produced by Michael Moore    
  Produced by Stephen McEveety   Produced by Mark Achbar   Starring Mark Achbar   Wendey Stanzler(associate)[1]    
  John Shepherd   Bart Simpson   Noam Chomsky   Written by Michael Moore    
  Todd Burns   Written by Joel Bakan   Release date(s) 1992   Starring Michael Moore    
  Written by Novel   Harold Crooks   Running time 167 minutes   Roger B. Smith    
  Freidoune Sahebjam   Mark Achbar   Country Australia   Janet Rauch    
  Screenplay   Narrated by Mikela J. Mikael   Finland   Rhonda Britton    
  Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh   Music by Leonard J. Paul   Norway   Fred Ross    
  Cyrus Nowrasteh   Cinematography Mark Achbar   Canada   Ronald Reagan    
  Starring Mozhan Marnò   Rolf Cutts   Language English   Bob Eubanks    
  Shohreh Aghdashloo   Jeff Koffman         Cinematography Chris Beaver    
  James Caviezel   Kirk Tougas         John Prusak    
  Parviz Sayyad   Editing by Jennifer Abbott         Kevin Rafferty    
  Vida Ghahremani   Studio Big Picture Media Corporation         Bruce Schermer    
  Music by John Debney   Distributed by Zeitgeist Films         Editing by Jennifer Beman    
  Cinematography Joel Ransom   Release date(s) Toronto International Film Festival:         Wendey Stanzler    
  Editing by David Handman   10-Sep-03         Distributed by Warner Bros.    
  Geoffrey Rowland   Canada         Release date(s) December 20, 1989 (US)    
  Distributed by Mpower Pictures   January 16, 2004(limited)         Running time 91 minutes    
  Release date(s) September 7, 2008(Toronto Film Festival)   United States:         Language English    
  June 26, 2009 (U.S.)   04-Jun-04         Budget $160,000[2]    
  October 22, 2010 (U.K.)   Australia::         Gross revenue $6,706,368[2    
  Running time 116 min.   02-Sep-04                
  Country United States   United Kingdom::                
  Language English   29-Oct-04                
  Persian   Running time 145 minutes                
  Gross revenue $636,246 (USA)[1   Country Canada                
        Language English                
  Canadian Bacon   In front of a gray silhouette of protesters holding up signs below a yellow-orange sky, a rotund man in casual clothing folds his arms and faces a silver-haired businessman in the foreground, whose back is to the viewer. The businessman holds up the American flag in his right hand while holding a bag with a dollar sign behind his back, out of view of the man and the protesters.
Capitalism: A Love Story
 
Religulous
  Kafka                                                        
 
 
         
 
   
  Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Directed by Michael Moore[1]   Directed by Michael Moore   Directed by Larry Charles   Directed by Steven Soderbergh    
  Produced by Michael Moore   Produced by Anne Moore   Produced by Bill Maher   Produced by Harry Benn    
  Written by Michael Moore   Michael Moore   Jonah Smith   Stuart Cornfeld    
  Starring Alan Alda   Written by Michael Moore   Palmer West   Written by Lem Dobbs    
  John Candy   Music by Jeff Gibbs   Written by Bill Maher   Starring Jeremy Irons    
  Bill Nunn   Cinematography Daniel Marracino   Starring Bill Maher   Theresa Russell    
  Kevin J. O'Connor   Jayme Roy   Cinematography Anthony Hardwick   Ian Holm    
  Rhea Perlman   Editing by Jessica Brunetto   Editing by Jeff Groth   Joel Grey    
  Kevin Pollak   Alex Meiller   Christian Kinnard   Music by Cliff Martinez    
  G.D. Spradlin   Tanya Meiller   Jeffrey M. Werner   Cinematography Walt Lloyd    
  Rip Torn   Conor O'Neill   Studio Thousand Words   Editing by Steven Soderbergh    
  Music by Elmer Bernstein   Pablo Proenza   Distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment   Distributed by Miramax Films    
  Peter Bernstein   T. Woody Richman   Release date(s) Toronto International Film Festival:   Release date(s) 15-Nov-91    
  Cinematography Haskell Wexler   John Walter   06-Sep-08   Running time 98 min    
  Editing by Michael Berenbaum   Studio The Weinstein Company   United States:   Country France, United States    
  Wendey Stanzler   Dog Eat Dog Films   October 1, 2008 (limited)   Language English    
  Studio Dog Eats Dog Films   Distributed by Overture Films (US)   Canada:   Budget $11,000,000    
  Propaganda Films   Paramount Vantage(international)   03-Oct-08          
  PolyGram Filmed Entertainment   Release date(s) September 6, 2009(VIFF)   United Kingdom:          
  Distributed by Gramercy Pictures   October 2, 2009(United States)   03-Apr-09          
  Release date(s) 22-Sep-95   Running time 127 minutes   New Zealand:          
  Running time 91 minutes   Country United States   03-May-09          
  Country United States   Language English   Running time 101 minutes          
  Language English   Budget $20,000,000   Country United States          
  Budget $11 million   Gross revenue $17,436,509[1   Language English          
  Gross revenue $163,971         Budget $2,500,000[1]          
              Gross revenue $13,136,074[1          
  JFK  
Heaven & Earth
  South of the Border   Platoon                                                        
 
 
     
 
 
 
   
  Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster   South of the Border is a 2009 documentary film directed by Oliver Stone. The documentary premiered at the 2009 Venice Film Festival. Writer for the projectTariq Ali calls the documentary "a political road movie".[1] Stone stated that he hopes the film will help people better understand a leader who is wrongly ridiculed "as a strongman, as a buffoon, as a clown."[2]The film has Stone and his crew travel from the Caribbean down the spine of the Andes in an attempt to explain the "phenomenon" of Venezuelan presidentHugo Chávez, and account for the continent's "pink tideleftward tilt. A key feature is also Venezuela's recent Bolivarian revolution and Latin America's political progress in the 21st century. In addition to Chávez, Stone sought to flesh out several other Latin American presidents whose policies and personalities generally get limited, or according to Stone, biased media attention in the United States and Europe, notably: Evo Morales of BoliviaCristina Kirchner and former presidentNéstor Kirchner of ArgentinaRafael Correa of EcuadorRaúl Castro of CubaFernando Lugo of Paraguay; and Lula da Silva of Brazil.[   Theatrical release poster by Bill Gold    
  Directed by Oliver Stone   Directed by Oliver Stone       Directed by Oliver Stone    
  Produced by A. Kitman Ho   Produced by Oliver Stone   Directed by Oliver Stone   Produced by Arnold Kopelson    
  Arnon Milchan   Arnon Milchan   Produced by Fernando Sulichin   Written by Oliver Stone    
  Oliver Stone   Mario Kassar   Jose Ibanez   Starring Charlie Sheen    
  Screenplay by Oliver Stone   Screenplay by Oliver Stone   Rob Wilson   Tom Berenger    
  Zachary Sklar   Story by Le Ly Hayslip   Written by Tariq Ali   Willem Dafoe    
  Based on On the Trail of the Assassins by   Jay Wurts   Mark Weisbrot   Forest Whitaker    
  Jim Garrison   Starring Tommy Lee Jones   Cinematography Carlos Marcovich   Keith David    
  Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy by   Joan Chen   Albert Maysles   Kevin Dillon    
  Jim Marrs   Haing S. Ngor   Editing by Alexis Chavez   Music by Georges Delerue    
  Narrated by Martin Sheen   Music by Kitaro   Distributed by Cinema Libre   Cinematography Robert Richardson    
  Starring Kevin Costner   Cinematography Robert Richardson   Release date(s) Sep-09   Editing by Claire Simpson    
  Gary Oldman   Editing by David Brenner   Running time 102 minutes   Studio Hemdale Film Corporation    
  Kevin Bacon   Sally Menke   Country United States   Distributed by Metro Goldwyn Mayer    
  Tommy Lee Jones   Studio Le Studio Canal +   Language English   Orion Pictures    
  Laurie Metcalf   Regency Enterprises         Release date(s) 19-Dec-86    
  Michael Rooker   New Regency Productions         Running time 120 minutes    
  Joe Pesci   Todd-AO         Country United States    
  Jay O. Sanders   Distributed by Warner Bros.         Language English    
  Donald Sutherland   Release date(s) 25-Dec-93         Budget $6.5 million    
  John Candy   Running time 140 minutes         Gross revenue $138,530,565    
  Sissy Spacek   Country France                
  Music by John Williams   United States                
  Cinematography Robert Richardson   Language English                
  Editing by Joe Hutshing   Vietnamese                
  Pietro Scalia   Budget $33 million                
  Studio Le Studio Canal+   Gross revenue $5,864,949                
  Regency Enterprises                      
  Alcor Films                      
  Ixtlan Corporation                      
  Distributed by Warner Bros.                      
  Release date(s) 20-Dec-91                      
  Running time 189 minutes                      
  Country United States                      
  Language English                      
  Budget $40 million                      
  Gross revenue $205.4 million                      
  Breaking the Silence:   The New Rulers of the World   Paying the Price:   Death of a Nation:                                                        
  Truth and Lies in the War on Terror  
 
  Killing the Children of Iraq   The Timor Conspiracy                                                        
 
 
  Screenshot of title card  
 
 
 
   
  Screenshot of title card   Directed by Alan Lowery   Screenshot of title card   Film title card    
  Directed by John Pilger   Produced by John Pilger   Directed by Alan Lowery   Directed by David Munro    
  Steve Connelly   Alan Lowery   Produced by John Pilger   Produced by David Munro    
  Produced by Christopher Martin   Polly Bide   Alan Lowery   Written by John Pilger    
  Richard Clemmow   Written by John Pilger   Written by John Pilger   Starring John Pilger    
  Written by John Pilger   Starring John Pilger   Starring John Pilger   Music by Agio Periera    
  Starring John Pilger   Stanley Fischer   Dennis Halliday   Cinematography Bob Bolt    
  Music by Nick Russell-Pavier   Nicholas Stern   Robert Gates   Preston Clothier    
  Cinematography Preston Clothier   Susan George   Hans von Sponeck   Simon Fanthorpe    
  Editing by Andrew Denny   George Monbiot   Peter van Walsum   David Munro    
  Studio Carlton Television   Vandana Shiva   Karol Sikora   Max Stahl    
  Running time 52 min   Dita Sari   James Rubin   Editing by Joe Frost    
  Country United Kingdom   Music by Bob Dylan   Scott Ritter   Studio Carlton Television    
  Language English   Maddy Prior   Said Aburish   Running time 96 minutes    
        Nick Russell-Pavier   Doug Rokke   Country United Kingdom    
        Cinematography Preston Clothier   Music by Nick Russell-Pavier   Language English    
        Jonathan Harrison   Cinematography Preston Clothier          
        Editing by Joe Frost   Editing by Joe Frost  
 
     
        Studio Carlton Television   Studio Carlton Television          
        Running time 65 min   Running time 74 min          
        Country United Kingdom   Country United Kingdom          
        Language English   Language English          
  1900   Ladybird, Ladybird   The China Syndrome   Norma Rae                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
       
  Theatrical release poster   Directed by Ken Loach   The China Syndrome promotional poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci   Produced by Sally Hibbin   Directed by James Bridges   Directed by Martin Ritt    
  Produced by Alberto Grimaldi   Written by Rona Munro   Produced by Michael Douglas   Produced by Tamara Asseyev    
  Written by Franco Arcalli   Starring Crissy Rock   Written by Mike Gray   Alex Rose    
  Bernardo Bertolucci   Vladimir Vega   T.S. Cook   Written by Harriet Frank, Jr.    
  Giuseppe Bertolucci   Music by George Fenton   James Bridges   Irving Ravetch    
  Starring Robert De Niro   Cinematography Barry Ackroyd   Starring Jane Fonda   Starring Sally Field    
  Gérard Depardieu   Editing by Jonathan Morris   Jack Lemmon   Beau Bridges    
  Dominique Sanda   Distributed by Samuel Goldwyn Company   Michael Douglas   Ron Leibman    
  Donald Sutherland   Release date(s) 16-Jun-94   Distributed by Columbia Pictures   Music by David Shire    
  Alida Valli   Running time 101 mins   Release date(s) 16-Mar-79   Cinematography John J. Alonzo    
  Burt Lancaster   Country United Kingdom   Running time 122 minutes   Editing by Sidney Levin    
  Music by Ennio Morricone   Language English   Country United States   Distributed by 20th Century Fox    
  Cinematography Vittorio Storaro         Language English   Release date(s) March 2, 1979[1]    
  Editing by Franco Arcalli         Gross revenue US$ 51.7 million[1   Running time 110 minutes    
  Studio Produzioni Europee Associati               Country United States    
  Distributed by 20th Century Fox (UK)               Language English    
  Paramount Pictures (USA)               Budget $7 million    
  United Artists(Australia/France/Germany)               Gross revenue $22,228,000    
  Release date(s) 15-Aug-76                      
  Running time 250 minutes (Argentina)                      
  248 minutes (Australia)                      
  302 minutes (Denmark)                      
  311 minutes (Italy)                      
  245 minutes (US uncut)                      
  255 minutes (VHS rated)                      
  311 minutes (US NC-17)                      
  315 minutes (Director's cut)                      
  Country Italy                      
  France                      
  West Germany                      
  Language Italian                      
  Budget $9 million[1]                      
  Gross revenue SEK6,064,026                      
  The Organizer   Let Him Have It       The Year of Living Dangerously                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
   
  French poster   Theatrical Release Poster       Theatrical poster    
  Directed by Mario Monicelli   that is the english title to a UK film, a naturalist style production in which a young man, with a mental age of 12, is sentenced to hang for "inciting" a fellow youth to murder. A little over-long perhaps, but the "Bentley case" certainly aroused some heated debate at the time, so it seems worth-while in an era in which young people around the world are hung as part of some bizarre social ritual designed perhaps to prove "justice always works"         Follows a journalist in the midst of Suharto's bloody coup to overthrow the democratically elected, leftist Indonesian government of Sukarno.    
  Produced by Franco Cristaldi   Directed by Peter Medak       Directed by Peter Weir    
  Written by Mario Monicelli   Produced by Luc Roeg   The Saint of Fort Washington - About the drugs trade and criminality thriving in the homeless shelters of your country, as the pollies pretend that the have "solved" homelessness. Very sad ending involving the death of a young schitzoprenic {as many homeless are}, and the prolonged lonliness of a black, Vietnam war vet who was his only friend. Very bleak and disillusioning, a real tear-jerker.   Produced by Jim McElroy    
  Age & Scarpelli   Robert Warr     Screenplay by Peter Weir    
  Starring Marcello Mastroianni   Written by Neal Purvis     David Williamson    
  Renato Salvatori   Robert Wade     Based on The Year of Living Dangerously by    
  Annie Girardot   Starring Christopher Eccleston     Christopher Koch    
  Folco Lulli   Paul Reynolds     Starring Mel Gibson    
  Gabriella Giorgelli   Tom Courtenay     Sigourney Weaver    
  Raffaella Carrà   Eileen Atkins     Michael Murphy    
  Music by Carlo Rustichelli   Music by Michael Kamen     Linda Hunt    
  Cinematography Giuseppe Rotunno   Cinematography Oliver Stapleton     Music by Maurice Jarre    
  Editing by Ruggero Mastroianni   Editing by Ray Lovejoy     Cinematography Russell Boyd    
  Release date(s) 25-Oct-63   Distributed by British Screen Productions     Editing by William M. Anderson    
  Running time 128 minutes   Release date(s) UK 1991     Distributed by MGM    
  Country Italy   US December 6 1991     Release date(s) 17-Dec-82    
  Language Italian   Running time 115 min     Running time 117 minutes    
        Language English     Country Australia    
                Language English    
                Budget $6 million    
                    Gross revenue $10,278,575 (USA)    
  Under Fire   Absolute Beginners    Riff-Raff   Germinal                                                        
 
 
  Main image of Absolute Beginners (1974)
 
   
 
 
is the story of a group of coal miners in late 19th century France, and to me it had some similarities to "The Grapes of Wrath", even though the setting was different.
   
  original film poster         British socialist director Ken Loach takes you on a tour of a building site during the Thatcher era. The workers are exploited and underpaid; unions not permitted; conditions in which the men work are extremely hazardous. After one of the "mates" is killed because of unsafe equipment the workers strike back. The legacy of Thatcherism and the inept Labour Party seen through the eyes of the multi- ethnic crew at a construction site."   Directed by Claude Berri    
  with Nick Nolte, Joanna Cassady and Gene Hackman, on the U.S. presence in the war in Nicaragua.         Directed by Ken Loach   Produced by Claude BerriPierre GrunsteinBodo Scriba    
  Directed by Roger Spottiswoode   Absolute Beginners -- A one-hour show about the Bolshevik-Menshevik split, starring Patrick Stewart as Lenin!, which is one of 13 episodes of the British Series "Fall of Eagles" series.   Starring Robert Carlyle,   Written by Claude BerriArlette LangmannÉmile Zola(novel)    
  Produced by Jonathan Taplin     Emer McCourt,   Starring Gérard DepardieuMiou-Miou and Renaud.    
  Written by ·                                 Clayton Frohman     Ricky Tomlinson   Music by Jean-Louis Roques    
  ·                                 Ron Shelton     Jimmy Coleman   Cinematography Yves Angelo    
  Starring ·                                 Nick Nolte     Cinematography Barry Ackroyd   Editing by Hervé de Luze    
  ·                                 Gene Hackman     Release date(s) 1991   Release date(s) 1993    
  ·                                 Joanna Cassidy         Running time 95 min.   Running time 160 min.    
  ·                                 Jean-Louis Trintignant         Country United Kingdom   Country
 France
   
  ·                                 Richard Masur         Language English   Language French    
  ·                                 Ed Harris               Gross revenue 52 375 096 €    
  Music by Jerry Goldsmith                      
  Cinematography John Alcott                      
  Editing by ·                                 Mark Conte                      
  ·                                 John Bloom (sup)                      
  Distributed by Orion Pictures                      
  Release date(s) 21-Oct-83                      
  Running time 128 minutes                      
  Country United States                      
  Language English                      
  The Garment Jungle   F.I.S.T   Business as Usual   Lenin: The Train (1988)                                                        
  Robert Loggia as an ILGWU organizer trying to get a contract for workers at a clothing factory owned by Lee J. Cobb, who has hired a vicious union-busting outfit. This is one of a relatively small number of American films that is explicitly pro-union  
 
 
 
  Lenin: The Train Poster
 
     
  Directed by Vincent Sherman   Theatrical release poster   Directed by Lezli-An Barrett          
  Robert Aldrich       Produced by Sara Geater   Director:       
  Produced by Harry Kleiner   Sly Stallone plays a young truck driver who organizes a truckers union, gets heavily indebted to Mafia guns in his rise to power, and then (dumb, dumb) tries to distance himself from the Mob. Loosely based on Jimmy Hoffa and the Teamsters, is very sympathetic to the difficulties of workers against armed company goons   Colin McKeown   Damiano Damiani      
  Written by Lester Velie   Directed by Norman Jewison   Written by Lezli-An Barrett   Writers:       
  Harry Kleiner   Produced by Gene Corman   Starring Glenda Jackson   Damiano DamianiFulvio Gicca Palliand 1 more credit »      
  Starring Lee J. Cobb   Screenplay by Joe Eszterhas   John Thaw   Stars:      
  Kerwin Matthews   Sylvester Stallone   Cathy Tyson    Ben KingsleyLeslie Caron and Dominique Sanda      
  Gia Scala   Story by Joe Eszterhas   Music by The Style Council          
  Music by Leith Stevens   Starring Sylvester Stallone   Cinematography Ernest Vincze          
  Cinematography Joseph F. Biroc   Rod Steiger   Editing by Henry Richardson          
  Editing by William Lyon   Peter Boyle   Distributed by Cannon Film Distributors(USA)          
  Distributed by Columbia Pictures   Melinda Dillon   Release date(s) 1987          
  Release date(s) 25-Apr-57   David Huffman   Running time 89 mins.          
  Running time 88 minutes   Kevin Conway   Country United Kingdom          
  Country United States   Tony Lo Bianco and   United States          
  Language English   Anthony Kiedis   Language English          
        Music by Bill Conti   A British drama about a woman fired for protesting sexual harassment, who inspires a nation-wide strike that successfully gets her reappointed. Along the way it portrays the failures of the labor movement as the result of collaboration, and is sympathetic to the Labour Party's Militant Tendency.          
        Cinematography László Kovács            
        Editing by Graeme Clifford            
        Distributed by United Artists            
        Release date(s) 1978            
        Running time 145 minutes            
        Language English            
        Budget $11,000,000            
        Gross revenue $20,388,920            
  Lowest of the low   Aus der schönen neuen Welt-Expeditionen ins Landesinnere
Iranian Workers in Japan
  Joe Hill   The Assassination of Trotsky                                                        
 
 
     
 
  The Assassination of Trotsky Poster
 
     
  Günter Wallraff in 2010         Theatrical release poster          
  Born October 1, 1942 (age 68)   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOQYz4Gswts   Directed by Bo Widerberg          
  Burscheid         Produced by Waldemar Bergendahl   The Assassination of Trotsky is a 1972 British film directed by Joseph Losey with a screenplay by Nicholas Mosley. It starred Richard Burton as Leon Trotsky, as well as Romy Schneider and Alain Delon.    
  Occupation Writerundercover journalist Wallraff's most celebrated work is Ganz unten ('Lowest of the Low', 1985), which succeeded in placing the suffering of Germanys immigrant workers on the mainstream political agenda. For his undercover investigation, he disguised himself as a Turkish worker and penetrated Germany's illegal labour market. He recorded his experiences of working at the 'bottom of the heap': in a Thyssen steel factory, a McDonald's and as a human guinea pig in the pharmaceutical industry.  His investigative methods have led to the creation of the Swedish verb 'wallraffa' meaning "to expose misconduct from the inside by assuming a role" which has been officially included in word list of the Swedish Academy         Bo Widerberg      
          Written by Bo Widerberg      
          Starring Thommy Berggren      
          Cinematography Jörgen Persson      
          Editing by Bo Widerberg      
            Release date(s) Sweden:      
            25-Aug-71      
            United States:      
            24-Oct-71      
            Running time 117 minutes      
            Country Sweden      
              United States          
              Language English          
              Swedish          
                           
  Persepolis   Shooting dogs   Blood Diamond   The Killing Fields                                                        
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  Theatrical release poster   Promotional movie poster   Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster    
  Directed by Marjane Satrapi   Directed by Michael Caton-Jones   Directed by Edward Zwick   Directed by Roland Joffé    
  Vincent Paronnaud   Starring John Hurt   Produced by Marshall Herskovitz   Produced by David Puttnam    
  Produced by Xavier Rigault   Hugh Dancy   Graham King   Iain Smith    
  Marc-Antoine Robert   Claire-Hope Ashitey   Paula Weinstein   Written by Bruce Robinson    
  Kathleen Kennedy   Release date(s) 2005   Edward Zwick   Starring Sam Waterston    
  Screenplay by Marjane Satrapi   Running time 115 min.   Written by Charles Leavitt   John Malkovich    
  Vincent Paronnaud   Country United Kingdom   Starring Leonardo DiCaprio   Haing S. Ngor    
  Based on Persepolis by   Germany   Djimon Hounsou   Julian Sands    
  Marjane Satrapi   Language EnglishFrench   Jennifer Connelly   Music by Mike Oldfield    
  Starring Chiara Mastroianni         Michael Sheen   Cinematography Chris Menges    
  Catherine Deneuve         Arnold Vosloo   Editing by Jim Clark    
  Danielle Darrieux         Music by James Newton Howard   Distributed by Warner Bros.    
  Simon Abkarian         Cinematography Eduardo Serra   Release date(s) 02-Nov-84    
  Music by Olivier Bernet         Editing by Steven Rosenblum   Running time 141 minutes    
  Editing by Stéphane Roche         Studio The Bedford Falls,   Country United Kingdom    
  Studio The Kennedy/Marshall Company         Virtual Studios   Language English    
  Distributed by Sony Pictures Classics         Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures   French    
  Release date(s) 23-May-07         Release date(s) 08-Dec-06   Khmer    
  Running time 95 minutes         Running time 143 minutes   Budget $14.4 million[1]    
  Country France         Country United States   Gross revenue $34,700,291    
  United States         Germany          
  Language French         Language English          
  English         Mende          
  Persian         Krio          
  German         Afrikaans          
  Budget $7.3 million         Budget $100 million          
  Gross revenue $22,752,488         Gross revenue $171,407,179          
  The Last King of Scotland   Milk   Revolution  
The Founding of a Republic
                                                       
 
 
 
 
 
 
       
  UK Theatrical release poster   Theatrical release poster   Original poster   Film poster    
  Directed by Kevin Macdonald   Directed by Gus Van Sant   Directed by Hugh Hudson   Traditional 建國大業    
  Produced by Charles Steel   Produced by Dan Jinks   Produced by Irwin Winkler   Simplified 建国大业    
  Lisa Bryer   Bruce Cohen   Written by Robert Dillon   Pinyin Jiàn Gúo Dà Yè    
  Andrea Calderwood   Written by Dustin Lance Black   Starring Al Pacino   Jyutping Gin3 Gwok3 Daai6 Jip6    
  Screenplay by Peter Morgan   Starring Sean Penn   Donald Sutherland   Directed by Huang Jianxin    
  Jeremy Brock   Emile Hirsch   Nastassja Kinski   Han Sanping    
  Based on The Last King of Scotland by   Josh Brolin   Helen Porter   Produced by Huang Jianxin    
  Giles Foden   Diego Luna   Music by John Corigliano   Han Sanping    
  Starring Forest Whitaker   Alison Pill   Cinematography Bernard Lutic   Written by Chen Baoguang    
  Gillian Anderson   Victor Garber   Editing by Stuart Baird   Wang Xingdong    
  James McAvoy   and James Franco   Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures   Starring Tang Guoqiang    
  Kerry Washington   Music by Danny Elfman   Release date(s) 25-Dec-85   Zhang Guoli    
  Simon McBurney   Cinematography Harris Savides   Running time 126 minutes (theatrical)   Xu Qing    
  Music by Alex Heffes   Editing by Elliot Graham   115 minutes (DVD version)   Liu Jin    
  Cinematography Anthony Dod Mantle   Studio Focus Features   Country United Kingdom   Chen Kun    
  Editing by Justine Wright   Distributed by Universal Pictures   Language English   Wang Wufu    
  Studio DNA Films   Release date(s) 26-Nov-08   Budget $28,000,000   Music by Shu Nan    
  Film 4   Running time 128 minutes   Gross revenue $346,761   Cinematography Zhao Xiaoshi    
  Distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures   Country United States         Editing by Xu Hongyu    
  Release date(s) 27 September 2006(United States)   Language English         Studio China Film Group    
  12 January 2007(United Kingdom)   Budget $20 million         Shanghai Film Studio    
  Running time 123 minutes[1]   Gross revenue $54,501,383         Media Asia Films    
  Country United Kingdom               Emperor Motion Pictures    
  Germany               Universe Entertainment    
  Language English               Polybona Films    
  Swahili               China Movie Channel    
  Budget US$6 million               Beijing Guoli Changsheng Movies & TV Productions    
  Gross revenue US$48,362,207               Beijing Hualu Baina Film & TV Production    
                    Jiangsu Broadcasting Corporation    
                    DMG Entertainment    
                    Beijing Xinbaoyuan Movie & TV Investment    
                    Distributed by China Film Group    
                    Beijing Polybona Film Distribution (China)    
                    Universe Films Distribution (Hong Kong)    
                    Release date(s) 16-Sep-09    
                    Running time 135 minutes    
                    Country China    
                    Language Mandarin    
                    Budget $8.8–$10 million    
                    Gross revenue $62.5 million[1][2    
  Union Maids   Salt of the Earth   White King, Red Rubber, Black Death          
     
 
  White King, Red Rubber, Black Death Poster
Watch is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T9gaxNPMmFA
    The Slingshot Poster
     
  Directed by Jim Klein                  
  Miles Mogulescu                  
  Julia Reichert           Stocholm in the 1920s. Young Roland lives with his socialist father, Jewish mother and a boxing brother. His mother sells condoms illegally, and from them, Roland makes slingshots which he sells. His rebellious ways has gotten him the special attention of his school teacher, who always makes sure that Roland is punished    
  Produced by Jim Klein              
  Miles Mogulescu              
  Julia Reichert              
  Cinematography Tony Heriza              
  Sherry Novick       Documentary about how King Leopold II of Belgium acquired Congo as a colony and exploited it by reign of terror.      
  Editing by Jim Klein      
Director: 
     
  Julia Reichert       Peter Bate      
  Release date(s) 04-Feb-76      
Writer: 
     
  Running time 50 minutes       Peter Bate      
  Country United States      
Stars:
     
  Language English        Elie LisonRoger May and Steve Driesen      
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
        Video cover          
        Directed by Herbert J. Biberman          
        Produced by Paul Jarrico              
        Sonja Dahl Biberman              
        Adolfo Barela              
        Written by Michael Wilson              
        Michael Biberman              
        Starring Rosaura Revueltas                
        Will Geer                
        David Wolfe                
        Mervin Williams                
        David Sarvis                
        Ernesto Velázquez                
        Juan Chacón                
        Henrietta Williams                
        Music by Sol Kaplan                
        Cinematography Stanley Meredith                
        Leonard Stark                
        Editing by Joan Laird                
        Ed Spiegel                
        Distributed by Independent Productions                
        Release date(s) March 14, 1954(New York City)                
        Running time 94 minutes                
        Country United States                
        Language English                
        Spanish                
        Budget $250,000                
                           


I need to a few more. Check it out later for additional list. Back to main page