
1989
This documentary examines the formation of labor unions in El Salvador and the systematic violations of workers’ rights that characterized the country during the 1980s. Through testimonies and on-the-ground footage, it exposes the climate of employer authoritarianism and repression faced by workers, situating these conflicts within a broader history of social unrest that dates back to the 1930s and re-emerged with intensity in the 1980s. The film also depicts how the guerrilla movement carried out campaigns of political and labor awareness among peasants and workers, encouraging collective organization and the defense of labor rights. Ultimately, the documentary reveals the “two faces” of El Salvador: on one side, state power embodied by the army and the police; on the other, the opposition represented by guerrilla forces and grassroots popular organizations.

Seeing El Salvador

The Tiger and the Deer

Topiltzin

Little Birds

The Flickering Flame

The Red Elvis

One, the Story of a Goal

The Crazy Life

Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports Exposed

Maria's Story

Return to El Salvador

Borderlands

Revealed: Building Bad

Solidarność: How Solidarity Changed Europe

Tiempo de audacia

Be A Patriot, Kill A Priest

The Tiniest Place

With Babies and Banners: Story of the Women's Emergency Brigade

As Goes Janesville

The Old School of Capitalism