Death on the Job (1991) Poster

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10/10
Powerful
Rodrigo_Amaro5 April 2024
This insightful documentary by Vince DiPersio and Bill Guttentag covers the issue of poor workers safety regulations that leads to accidents, injuries and deaths, as observed in the United States in the late 1980's. It's a shocking and depressive reality that echoes a lot deeper from anyone outside of the U. S. because if they had a tragic toll number of 10.000 back then, a highly developed nation, what could one imagine in less developed countries. "Death on the Job" presents a series of accidents that happened in many different and risky workplaces such as fishing, construction and oil refineries, interviewing survivors, family members of deceased ones and lawyers talking not only about the incidents but also why they happen and what could be done to be prevented.

While the film points out on the usual suspects and usual causes on why safety regulations aren't followed and/or enforced (companies that profit by saving money and cutting costs are the main factor), it's also amazingly surprising that regulatory agencies also fail with their overseeing of companies and workers, almost as if being part of a failed state or under a dominating regime controlled by some tyrannical state. The first story relating with the fishing industry was the one that surprised me the most as a survivor recalls the company's insane demands for over-hours, "punishment" tasks for those who didn't deliver those hours or refused to do them, and we get a glimpse from the actual accident of his sinking boat that capsized as there was no stability with the ammount of fishes taken in order to fulfill a quota. And the tragedies only get worse each minute you see and hear why they happened.

The good news (if there is one) is that the numbers presented in the early minutes of the documentary were reduced by half in those 30 years.

Yet 5.000 is still a great number to consider, and simply for something so pertinent to everyone's lives which is to work, to go there and feel safe about it, no matter the risks. The irony of it all is what makes everything sound so absurd: you go to the place where you earn a living yet you could die on it and most of the time it wouldn't be your entirely responsability if a tragedy would occur - as we depend of others doing their job.

It's a different world than the one shown in the film, safety regulations and practices changed a lot over the years (also a way for companies escape from big lawsuits) and I like to think a film like this was helpful in providing some change of perception on those issues. It's a heavily powerful film, one of those you won't forget too soon and it makes a great case for debate, wheter one faced similar or worse scenarios, and if there are things and ways to change what's wrong and create safe work environments. 10/10.
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9/10
Compelling and sad indictment of worker safety in the US oil industry
photoe16 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
HARROWING coverage of deadly accidents in the oil industry, and from not distant history. The film was made in 1991, and they covered a lot of accidents just from the late 1980s, including the Philips explosion in Texas that killed 23 and injured 314!, and then 17 killed in an ARCO plant explosion not very far from the first one. THe interviews with the loved ones of the deceased are really disturbing, as is the silence from the corporate greed-driven CEOs who all declined to be interviewed.

This documentary has been BURIED, but its great. Narrated by Joe Mantegna.

Directed and produced by Bill Guttentag
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