Weds, July 3rd, 6:30pm – The drama, the subterfuge, the moral dilemma… This summer enjoy classic and modern movies about whistleblowers showing on select Wednesdays at the library in the Raytheon Room. Popcorn and lemonade provided. Feel free to bring your beach chair if it’s more comfortable for you!
July 3rd – On the Waterfront (1954), 1 hr, 48 min
Marlon Brando stars in this hard-hitting drama about an ex-prizefighter who goes up against labor leaders to expose corruption in the ranks.
July 17 – Serpico (1973), 2 hrs, 9 min
Sidney Lumet’s drama portrays the real-life struggle of an honest New York City cop against a corrupt system. Neophyte officer Frank Serpico (Al Pacino) is determined not to let his job get in the way of his individuality.
July 24 – The China Syndrome (1979), 2 hrs, 3 min
A true nailbiter, The China Syndrome is a potent harbinger of the potential devastation that can be wrought when humans attempt to harness an energy source they don’t fully understand, an energy that can leave no leeway for such human foibles as avarice and sloth.
July 31 – North Country (2005), 2 hrs, 6 min
This true story centers on Lori Jenson, who took a job at a Minnesota iron mine in 1975. She and other female miners endured harassment from male co-workers, ranging from verbal taunts to pornographic graffiti and worse. Jenson eventually filed suit in 1984 and won a landmark legal decision.
August 7 – The Informant (2009), 1 hr, 48 min
A rising star in the agricultural industry suddenly turns whistleblower in hopes of gaining a lucrative promotion and becoming a hero of the common people, inadvertently revealing his penchant for helping himself to the corporate coffers and ultimately threatening to derail the very investigation he helped to launch in this offbeat comedy from Academy Award-winning director Steven Soderbergh.
August 28 – The Fifth Estate (2013), 2 hrs, 8 min
Triggering our age of high-stakes secrecy, explosive news leaks and the trafficking of classified information, WikiLeaks forever changed the game. Now, in a dramatic thriller based on real events, “The Fifth Estate” reveals the quest to expose the deceptions and corruptions of power that turned an Internet upstart into the 21st century’s most fiercely debated organization.