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Olen 2022-04-01 09:01:19
The lively Britain of the 1960s made a political film about women's rights not so difficult. sally hawkins is full of...
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Ashleigh 2022-04-01 09:01:19
This movie is a political comedy, very loving~ I like this kind of movie that has something to say, it is very interesting, and it reflects the real life status of certain people in a period, and it is full of true...
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Laverne 2022-04-01 09:01:19
This score is based on my fundamental disagreement with the film. For the vast majority of women, "equality between men and women" is just a shout. They only admit this view when it is beneficial to themselves, and selectively ignore it when it is unfavorable. There are too many examples, and they exist in all aspects of the whole society. It depends on whether you are willing to face it and admit...
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Archibald 2022-03-31 09:01:09
Love Sally Hawkins! But many of her characters have some shadows of the same characteristics (carefree, desert flower, happy collision)... Things other than unions in the film are quite...
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Milan 2022-03-31 09:01:09
female consciousness...
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Jermaine 2022-03-31 09:01:09
British inspirational film, based on real events, and it is about us women fighting for power. It made me cry,...
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Jamir 2022-03-31 09:01:09
That london accent...the movie is just...
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Mae 2022-03-31 09:01:09
Very inspirational...
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Gerardo 2022-03-31 09:01:09
All the girls should take a look. At the end of the film, the grandmothers sit and talk and laugh about their memories. I hope that when I am old, I can have such a group of partners proudly talking about the proud memories of the past, no matter how...
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Kallie 2022-03-31 09:01:09
The passionate women's movement should be equal regardless of gender. The passion of the revolutionary great man is directly proportional to the obstacles he...
Made in Dagenham Comments
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Roselyn 2022-03-28 08:01:02
We are ladies, not bitches.
Watching this movie during this emotional period of the South Walk incident can obviously get a little warmth in the cold winter.
She should not have thought that Barbara would give them such a good result in the end.
If it weren't for the encouragement of my co-workers and my husband's last... -
Ruben 2022-03-29 09:01:10
EVERYBODY,OUT
The whole film is full of joyful atmosphere, happy music, happy costumes, and happy smiles. If you want to make a more bitter film, you can do it. Maybe you have a better chance of winning.
The original name is "we want sex". In the first half of the strike slogan, when the banner in the film was...
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[following her talk with Rita, Connie and the rest of the Dagenham women, Barbara Castle makes a statement to the waiting journalists]
Barbara Castle: I am delighted to announce that, following our talks this afternoon, the 187 Ford machinists *will* be going back to work on the 1st of July. They will receive an immediate pay rise of seven pence an hour which will put them at 92 percent of the male rate. However this is not all. As a result of our discussion, I can confirm that the Government is in full support of the creation of an Equal Pay Act, and by the autumn of this year I guarantee appropriate legislation to ensure that this act becomes law!
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[Peter Hopkins is entertaining Ford boss Robert Tooley at home. He clearly regards Lisa as a wife whose only purpose is to look pretty and to be a cook, but Robert sounds out her opinions]
Robert Tooley: Lisa. Do you mind if I call you Lisa? You must have quite a head on your shoulders. Peter tells me that you read history at Cambridge.
Lisa Hopkins: [nervously] Yes I did.
Robert Tooley: Mind if I ask: what do you think of our little problem over at the factory? Do you think maybe he's a bit too much velvet glove, not enough iron fist?
Lisa Hopkins: Not at all, no. Quite the opposite, actually. Look at Vauxhall. *They* don't have any problems with the unions. And that seems to be because General Motors have a more collaborative approach to management. Whereas at Ford you only deal with the unions because you *have* to. You tolerate them. And as a result they're more entrenched and they're aggressive in their dealings with you.
[Robert and Peter look speechless]
Robert Tooley: [patronisingly] Well that's a very *progressive* point of view.