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Workingman's Death

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Austria, Germany · 2005
Rated G · 2h 2m
Director Michael Glawogger
Starring
Genre Documentary

This documentary depicts the working conditions of several groups trying to make a living in areas throughout the world, including miners in Ukraine, sulfur carriers in Indonesia, butchers in an open-air market in Nigeria, welders in a ship-breaking yard in Pakistan, and steel workers in China.

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60

Variety by

Pic reps a sequel of sorts to his 12-part "Megacities" about poor folk in separate burgs, and comes soaked in good old-fashioned humanist respect for the dignity of labor, but eventually grows a little monotonous.

50

Chicago Tribune by Allison Benedikt

It's not exactly a good time at the movies, and even as pure education, it's a rather dull film with very little dialogue, but Glawogger does succeed in capturing the images, sounds and even imagined scents (oh, those burning goats) of contemporary hard labor, work that has become nearly invisible to us cubicle jockeys.

63

New York Daily News by Jami Bernard

It's a triumph of the human spirit that so many people in deadly jobs are able, nevertheless, to marry and have a few happy moments despite lives of hellish labor. Glawogger's intrepid camera finds both the shame and the grace in it.

80

Village Voice by Michael Atkinson

Michael Glawogger's rather majestic Workingman's Death takes a symphonic structure to document some of the ugliest and most dangerous shit work on the globe.

83

The A.V. Club by Nathan Rabin

Workingman's Death's primary pleasures are aesthetic. Glawogger is an extraordinarily elegant filmmaker with a photographer's eye for striking compositions.

70

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

In the film's production notes, Mr. Glawogger wonders, "Is heavy manual labor disappearing or is it just becoming invisible?" In this visually impressive but proudly unscientific hymn to progress, the answers are yes and yes.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

There's scant dialogue in Workingman's Death, but little is needed when majestic camera work by Wolfgang Thaler tells the story so well.

75

San Francisco Chronicle by Walter Addiego

This documentary about men and women performing brutal work tasks for next to no money is full of arresting and eloquent images. It has little dialogue, and little is needed.

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