The Day Iceland Stood Still

Friday, March 21st

7 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)

See trailer HERE

$10.00

71 in stock

The Day Iceland Stood Still

Description

Documentary by Pamela Hogan and Hrafnhildur Gunnarsdóttir about the Women’s Day Off in Iceland. When 90% of the women of Iceland walked off the job and out of their homes one fall morning in 1975 refusing to work, cook, or take care of the children, they brought their country to a standstill and catapulted Iceland to the “best place in the world to be a woman.” Told for the first time by the women themselves, and laced with playful animation, the story is subversive and unexpectedly funny. “We loved our male chauvinist pigs,” recalls one of the activists, “We just wanted to change them a little!” Directed by Emmy award-winning US filmmaker Pamela Hogan in collaboration with acclaimed Icelandic producer Hrafnhildur Gunnarsdóttir, and perfectly timed for release in the lead-up to the strike’s 50th anniversary, The Day Iceland Stood Still inspires viewers to reimagine the possible.

1 of the 10 “MUST SEE” films at Hot Docs Festival

“There is a playfulness within this film that is both enthusiastic and infectious. As momentum begins to grow, the buzz across the nation grows as these women begin to realize the power they truly possess. In this way, Hogan’s film serves as an inspirational piece to all women.” – Screen Fish

Iceland is known for its glaciers, volcanoes, and leading nearly the whole damn world in women’s rights and gender equality. How did this Nordic island nation manage to achieve what so few superpower countries have been able to? Zero in on October 24, 1975, when 90% of Iceland’s women—completely fed up with being disregarded, underpaid, and unrecognized in the workplace and in the home—walked off their jobs and brought the country to a standstill. This remarkable true story is told here for the first time in a vibrant mix of interviews with those who organized and participated in the massive “women’s day off” event and color-soaked animation recreating key moments in the movement. The spark was ignited that day and, with continued effort and powerful collaboration, real change followed. Perfectly timed with the lead-up to the strike’s 50th anniversary, this doc is subversive, funny, and fist-pumpingly galvanizing. —D. Quinones

Friday, March 21st

7 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)

See trailer HERE