Made
in Dagenham
UK 2010 113
minutes
Director: Nigel
Cole
Starring: Sally Hawkins, Rosamund
Pike, Bob Hoskins, Miranda Richardson and Geraldine James
Nominations
and Awards
- Nominated
for 4 BAFTAs including Outstanding British Film and Best Supporting
Actress (Miranda Richardson)
-
Another
8 nominations including nominations for Best Actress (Sally Hawkins), Best
Supporting Actress (Rosamund Pike) and Best Supporting Actor (Bob Hoskins)
at the British Independent Film Awards
Roger
Ebert
Rita O’Grady (Sally
Hawkins) unwillingly becomes shop steward at Ford’s Dagenham plant and then leads
a strike of the 187 women sewing machinists, when they walk out against sexual
discrimination and claim equal pay. The strike is successful and Barbara Castle
(Miranda Richardson), as Secretary of State for Labour in Harold Wilson’s
government uses it to promote what was to become the 1970 Equal Pay Act.
The inspiration for
the film was a radio programme which reunited personnel from both sides of the
strike many years later. Steven Wooley
as producer heard the programme and realised its potential as a subject for a film:
the key historical events of the story are true, some individual elements of
the original characters reappear in some of the strikers, while other
characters are entirely fictional.
In the central role
of Rita Sally Hawkins is superb: she made her name in a series of films with
Mike Leigh, but the tone of this film, despite the potentially grim nature of
the subject, is closer to Calendar Girls
(also directed by Nigel Cole). Philip
French also suggests a comparison with a naughty Carry On film rather than to Ken
Loach’s Bread and Roses, another film
about a strike by women, this time by Latino office cleaners in Los Angeles.
However the film is far more than a vehicle for Sally Hawkins: the cast includes established actresses like Geraldine James and Miranda Richardson as well as rising stars like Andrea Riseborough (Brighton Rock and Never Let Me Go) and Rosamund Pike (Pride and Prejudice and An Education). Bob Hoskins earned good reviews for his role as a minor union official who is both mentor and friend to Rita and there is a superb cameo from John Sessions as a pipe-smoking Harold Wilson.
However the film is far more than a vehicle for Sally Hawkins: the cast includes established actresses like Geraldine James and Miranda Richardson as well as rising stars like Andrea Riseborough (Brighton Rock and Never Let Me Go) and Rosamund Pike (Pride and Prejudice and An Education). Bob Hoskins earned good reviews for his role as a minor union official who is both mentor and friend to Rita and there is a superb cameo from John Sessions as a pipe-smoking Harold Wilson.
Despite the good
reviews and numerous nominations for awards,
Made in Dagenham had the misfortune to be released in the same year as The King’s Speech which in total won more
than 60 major awards.
Here's the trailer:
Here's the trailer: