Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 2, Summer 2007 | Page 64

60 Popular Culture Review written during a period of social change in which the Wobblie legacy resonated. In his preface to the abridged edition of this labor classic, Joseph A. McCartin takes note of the cultural milieu, observing, “Dubofsky’s history of the IWW appeared at just the moment when proponents of the New Left and the civil rights and antiwar struggles, having suffered the disillusionment and defeats of 1968, began to cast about for models of an authentic American radicalism that could sustain them over the long haul and rescue them from encroaching despair. In Dubofsky’s IWW, they found joyful champions of what the New Left called participatory democracy, ardent visionaries of what the civil rights movement called the beloved community, and principled foes of what antiwar activists dubbed the military-industrial complex. They also found radicals undaunted by crushing defeats, men and women who had come to believe that ‘in the struggle itself lies the happiness of the fighter,’ as one IWW die-hard once put it.”'^ While cultural protest was influencing the academic community in the late 1960s, international cinema also reflected the spirit of rebellion flowing through the United States, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Africa as world revolution appeared almost imminent. In 1970, Swedish filmmaker Bo Widerberg released Joe Hill with Thommy Berggren in the title role and Wendy Geier as Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, the inspiration for Hill’s epic song “Rebel Girl.” Widerberg’s film tells the story of Swedish immigrant Joseph Hillstrom, who was bom Joel Hagglund in his native land, from his arrival in North America in 1901 until his death in 1915. The film is clearly sympathetic to the union organizer who understood the importance of music as a propaganda weapon, and Widerberg does not accept Wallace Stegner’s premise that the Wobblie martyr was guilty of murder. The film received generally favorable reviews, but some critics, such as Joan Mellen in a piece for Film Quarterly, took issue with the film’s conclusion. After Joe’s death, IWW leaders are dividing up his ashes to send to every state as the martyr requested. This activity, however, is interrupted by dancing in an adjoining room, and the union men desert Hill’s remains to dance with younger women. The final shot of the film is that of Joe’s abandoned ashes with Joan Baez singing “The Ballad of Joe Hill” in the background. Mellen took issue with Widerberg’s suggestion that the IWW betrayed Hill’s legacy. And certainly the heroic individual here is being privileged at the expense of the mass movement.’"^ American film audiences in 1971 were also treated to Italian filmmaker Giuliano Montaldo’s Sacco and Vanzetti. Although the film does not directly deal with the IWW, it did attempt to recreate the oppression of the First Red Scare and make connections with the political unrest of the 1960s. The Italian anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti also shared the syndicalist philosophy espoused by the Wobblies. Montaldo’s film strongly (too vehemently for some critics) championed the innocence of Sacco and Vanzett i. It is within this cinematic context that director Martin Scorsese released his first Hollywood film. Boxcar Bertha (1971), loosely based upon IWW supporter Boxcar Bertha Thompson’s