American Factory

American Factory

2019110 min
7.2/10
Documentary

Plot Summary

In post-industrial Ohio, a Chinese billionaire opens a new factory in the husk of an abandoned General Motors plant, hiring two thousand blue-collar Americans. Early days of hope and optimism give way to setbacks as high-tech China clashes with working-class America.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (11)

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Junming 'Jimmy' Wang

Self - Vice President, Fuyao

Sherrod Brown

Sherrod Brown

Self - U.S. Senator, Ohio

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Dave Burrows

Self - Vice President, Fuyao Glass America

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John Gauthier

Self - President, Fuyao Glass America

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Rob Haerr

Self - Furnace Supervisor

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Cynthia Harper

Self - Lamination Specialist

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Wong He

Self - Furance Engineer

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Jill Lamantia

Self - Forklift Operator

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Jeff Daochuan Liu

Self - President, Fuyao Glass America

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Shawnea Rosser

Self - Glass Inspector

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Rebecca Ruan-O'Shaughnessy

Self - Fuyao Attorney

🎬Crew

Director

Julia Reichert

Producers

Julie Parker Benello, Steven Bognar, Julia Reichert, Jeff Skoll, Diane Weyermann

🖼️Gallery (4 images)

American Factory backdrop 1
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🏷️Keywords

factory workerculture clashohiochineseamericanblue collar workermanufacturing plantlabor rights

💬Reviews (1)

R

rsanek

9/19/2020

You always read about "cultural differences" as being something that must be overcome when dealing with international projects, but that language always felt so abstract to me; if anything, it seemed like more of an excuse as to why things might be delayed rather than a real problem. This doc did a great job of telling the story of what that concept really means in practice. _American Factory_ shows you how much friction is created due to the incongruity in cultural ideas about work ethic, personal freedoms, power, and process. I think that was the highlight of the story for me. For me as an American, there were also feelings of frustration about having a country that doesn't have an answer for these people; their life goes from making $29 working for a US company, to making $12 for a Chinese company. The anti-labor-organizing that we see from Fuyao in the film isn't even unique to this being a China-based company; our home-grown Amazon does a pretty good job of hiring "labor relations" firms to weed out union organizing. I find myself agreeing with one of the speakers at a UAW event captured in the film: we've allowed our country to become one where the rich can exploit the poor, and it would be pretty cool to take it back.

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Production Companies

Higher Ground
Participant
Field of Vision