On August 19, 2005 Roy Koch, along with
4,400 airline mechanics, custodians, and
cleaners, went on strike against Northwest
Airlines, the fourth largest airline in the
world. Northwest, otherwise known as
“The Red Tail” by its employees, wanted to
lay off 53% of their union and outsource
their jobs. What followed was a 444-day
strike that would end with 4,000 union
members out of work, including Roy.
Instead of being left in the wake of
this battle, Roy and his daughter Melissa
(director of The Red Tail) set on a journey
to meet the worker to whom Roy’s job was
outsourced in China. The journey provides
a renewed sense of purpose for Roy, and
while Melissa wants to get answers to his
plight, her determination as a filmmaker is
always tempered by her love as a daughter.The film interweaves Roy and Melissa’s
search for connection in China with the
premeditated downfall of Northwest
Airlines. This downfall serves a vibrant
example of the dangers of our current
economic system, and casts a spotlight on
the future of the working class.
Nowadays there is a plethora of
documentaries that seek to explain the
tenuous nature of economic systems, but
in this year’s Fleadh none does so with the
deftness and humanity of The Red Tail.
The Directors will attend the screening |