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Up Against the Wall Motherfucker, often shortened as The Motherfuckers or UAW/MF, was a Dadaist and Situationist anarchist affinity group based in New York City. This "street gang with analysis" was famous for its Lower East Side direct action.
"Anarchism and Film". A database created by Santiago Juan-Navarro and hosted by ChristieBooks "A revolution in cinema?" by Duncan Campbell in The Guardian. An article dealing with anarchist films "Anarchist films" by Anarcho. An article on the subject which includes the trailers of some important films "Anarchist videos" by Anarchism.org
Gun City (Spanish: La sombra de la ley) is a 2018 Spanish-French action thriller film directed by Dani de la Torre and written by Patxi Amezcua. [1] Set in 1921 Barcelona, the plot displays anarchist struggle and police brutality as a backdrop.
A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 dystopian crime film adapted, produced, and directed by Stanley Kubrick, based on Anthony Burgess's 1962 novel.It employs disturbing and violent themes to comment on psychiatry, juvenile delinquency, youth gangs, and other social, political, and economic subjects in a dystopian near-future Britain.
The Monkey Wrench Gang is a novel written by American author Edward Abbey (1927–1989), published in 1975.. Abbey's most famous work of fiction, the novel concerns the use of sabotage to protest environmentally damaging activities in the Southwestern United States, and was so influential that the term "monkeywrench," often used as a verb, has come to mean, besides sabotage and damage to ...
Libertarias (English: Libertarians) is a Spanish historical drama made in 1996.It was written and directed by Vicente Aranda.. In 1936, Maria (Ariadna Gil), a young nun is recruited by Pilar (), a militant feminist, into an anarchist militia following the onset of the Spanish Civil War.
Anarchists is a 2000 South Korean action film directed by Yoo Young-sik and co-written by Park Chan-wook. Set in Shanghai in 1924, the film is about the Heroic Corps: a covert cell of insurrectionist anarchists who attempt to overthrow the Japanese government's occupation of Korea through propaganda of the deed. Told from the perspective of the ...
By presenting the principles of anarchism in plain language, the New York anarchists hoped that readers might be swayed to support the movement or, at a minimum, that the book might improve the image of anarchism and anarchists in the public's eyes. Parts of the work initially appeared in the Yiddish anarchist newspaper, Freie Arbeiter Stimme. [6]