North Country (film)

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This article refers to a 2005 film. For other meanings, see North Country.
North Country
Directed by Niki Caro
Produced by Nana Greenwald
Written by Clara Bingham,
Laura Leedy,
Michael Seitzman
Starring Charlize Theron
Frances McDormand
Sissy Spacek
Sean Bean
Woody Harrelson
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) 21 October 2005 (USA)
Running time 126 min
Language English
Budget ~ US$35,000,000
IMDb profile

North Country is the name of an Academy Award-nominated film directed by Niki Caro and released in 2005. It stars Charlize Theron as a female worker at a mining company who is sexually harassed and leads a class-action lawsuit against her employer for failing to protect her and other female employees. Theron garnered an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress for her role in the film. Frances McDormand, playing Theron's tough friend Glory, also received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The film is based on the case Jenson v. Eveleth Taconite Co., brought by Lois Jenson, although Theron's character in the movie is named Josey Aimes (many other characters in the movie are consolidations of several real-life individuals).

Principal photography on the film began in February 2005, and it was shot in northern Minnesota (including the towns of Eveleth and Virginia), Minneapolis, and New Mexico. The film was inspired by the book Class Action by Clara Bingham and Laura Leedy Gansler.

  • Tagline: All she wanted was to make a living. Instead she made history.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Charlize Theron as Josey Aimes
Charlize Theron as Josey Aimes

Josey Aimes (Charlize Theron) is a miner and the single mother of Sam and Karen.

The iron mine where she is employed used to have only male workers, but now there is a growing number of women seeking jobs. Both management and workers, including Josey's father, feel that women do not belong there; there is a recession, and the men feel that women are taking jobs directly from the men.

Josey is aware of the problems, but takes a job at the mine because it pays well, and she has to support her two children. She can handle the work, but is targeted, along with the other women, with sexual harassment and bullying. She tries to complain to management, and through her union representative, but things continue to get worse. Finally she quits.

She begins a sexual harassment lawsuit against her employer for failing to protect not only her but also the other female employees. She is initially unsuccessful, as the other women are both desperate to keep their jobs and afraid of the consequences if the lawsuit fails, and refuse to back her. She finally tries to plead he case at a labor union meeting, but is shouted down. Her father steps up, and points out that they would never treat wives and daughters this way, and questions why they feel it is right to treat his daughter so.

Her lawyer tries to file a class action lawsuit, but needs at least two other witnesses to prove the case. During the application for class action, Josey's sexual history is explored in detail. The film reveals Sammy was conceived when his mother was raped in high school by one of her teachers. The revelation that it was rape, not casual sex, seems to mark a turning point. Her highschool boyfriend (one of the main harrassers from the mine) acknowledges that he knew it was rape. Other people, beginning with her friend Glory, step forward to be counted in the class action suit. They win the case.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] US box office

North Country opened to 2,555 screens in Canada and the U.S and made 6,422,455 dollars in the film's opening weekend. As of January 8, 2006 the film had grossed 18.3 million dollars, but still there was some disappointment among the crew and studio because the film was expected to do better at the box office. The budget for the film was 35 million dollars. (North Country at Box Office Mojo)

[edit] Trivia

  • In the scene where Michelle Monaghan is trapped in the portable outhouse which is rocked and tipped over by her male co-workers, the supposed human waste was actually made of Gatorade, Cocoa Puffs, and pumpkin pie fillings.
  • The lawsuit which inspired the film was settled in 1998, 14 years after it was first filed and over 20 years after the harassments began.
  • In addition to previously released recordings by Bob Dylan, as well as cover versions of Dylan songs, the soundtrack includes a new Dylan song, "Tell Ol' Bill", recorded in 2005.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links