Screenplay
Martinique, 14 February 1974. At Chalvet, in the north of Martinique, one hundred laborers on strike are sprayed with tear gas, surrounded by fourteen trucks of mobile guards, grounded by a helicopter shooting at sight. The versions differ and are discussed. This strike is suspected of being led by leftists, who, usurping the place of the unions, are treating the economic and political stability by manipulating the peasantry. One dead, four seriously wounded by gunfire and dozens injured put an end of the story of the strike.
Director
Martinique, 14 February 1974. At Chalvet, in the north of Martinique, one hundred laborers on strike are sprayed with tear gas, surrounded by fourteen trucks of mobile guards, grounded by a helicopter shooting at sight. The versions differ and are discussed. This strike is suspected of being led by leftists, who, usurping the place of the unions, are treating the economic and political stability by manipulating the peasantry. One dead, four seriously wounded by gunfire and dozens injured put an end of the story of the strike.
Screenplay
Martinique, a former colony that became a French overseas department in 1946, becomes bogged down in an "unwavering attachment to France" as the great breath of independence struggles spread across the world. A poster in shimmering colors appears in the early morning of December 23, 1962 on all the walls of public buildings, schools, police stations, town halls, churches everywhere in Martinique.
Director
Martinique, a former colony that became a French overseas department in 1946, becomes bogged down in an "unwavering attachment to France" as the great breath of independence struggles spread across the world. A poster in shimmering colors appears in the early morning of December 23, 1962 on all the walls of public buildings, schools, police stations, town halls, churches everywhere in Martinique.
Director