No Contract, No Cookies: The Stella D'Oro Strike
No Contract, No Cookies: The Stella D'Oro Strike
| 20 August 2010 (USA)
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Follows the struggle of 138 mostly immigrant workers who strike to save their jobs at a famous bakery in the Bronx when a private equity firm buys the bakery and demands wage cuts of up to 30%.

Reviews
Comwayon

A Disappointing Continuation

Nayan Gough

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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Lucia Ayala

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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Candida

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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maconte

One of the characters in this film says that private equity companies like Brynwood are turning "the American dream into the American nightmare." This film provides viewers with a visceral sense of this process. It is better than any economics class in explaining the role of unions in the American economy .. and better than any lecturer in explaining why the middle class is disappearing. You see the lower middle class lifestyle that decent wages provide, the apartments in which the workers at Stella Doro live, the relatives whose education they paid for ... and you are left to imagine what happened to these people when all was said and done. If this story doesn't make you think twice about Republican America, you don't have a brain (and forget about a heart).

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evening1

A diverting though blatantly one-sided look at the damage that can result when private equity swoops in and tries to slash wages and benefits.More than 130 immigrants from 20 countries struck the Bronx-based Stella D'Oro plant in 2009. They won their case -- only to see the factory, which dated from the Thirties, shut down and sold.The filmmaker explores the personal side of the strongly bonded strike force, showing how workers toiled, sometimes for decades, as they chased the American Dream.Many of those interviewed seem to live in fairly cushy homes and one wonders what they actually made while on the bakery payroll. (We're never told.) One also questions how they could afford to walk a picket line for a whole nine months, but how workers survived this is never addressed. While the equity firm, Connecticut-based Brynwood, is made to look like the ultimate bad guy in this film, one wonders whether any attempt was made to speak with its principals. Again, the viewer is left clueless.This movie kept me interested but left me feeling manipulated.

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