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"The River" and the limits of working class solidarity

11 April 2024


"The River", a 1984 film directed by Mark Rydell and starring Sissy Spacek and Mel Gibson, is one of the more underrated political films of the 1980s.One of the biggest complaints of the movie is the miscasting Tom Garvey. Gibson himself later admitted he was too young and pretty to play this role. The story centers on Tom and Mae Garvey, Tennessee farmers who are barely holding onto their land during an economic crisis. As we begin, their farm is nearly destroyed by a flood and Tom is almost killed in the process. It doesn't get any better from there.

Local mill owner and capitalist villain Joe Wade, played masterfully by Scott Glenn, wants to buy up all of the flooded farm land in order to build a hydroelectric dam.Ironically, Glenn would later portray a Garvey in HBO's "The Leftovers". Throughout the film he does everything he can, both legally and illegally in order to squeeze the farmers out of the land, but the fiercely indepedent families refuse to sell.

Eventually, Tom Garvey is forced to take a job in a massive factory just to make ends meet until the harvest comes in. He travels to some unknown City, possibly Birmingham, and discovers he's been hired as a scab during a labor dispute. As trucks full of men crawl into the factory, striking workers hurl insults and rocks at the farmers. Garvey is shocked at what he's doing, but refuses to back down. His family needs the money.

Throughout their time as scabs, the men are constantly besieged by strikers. A brawl nearly takes a young man's life. And then, just as quickly as they were hired, they're let go. They have to leave the plant immediately and, in a further insult, they must do so by walking through the strikers. Tom is spit on by a woman, who yells at him for taking her family's food. He hangs his head in shame and walks on.

Tom himself is later put into the exact same position, only this time on the opposite side. In the climax of the film, it begins to flood again, and the farms need to be saved. They create a makeshift levy that protects their fields, but it is only barely holding on. At exactly the wrong time, the villain makes his return. Joe Wade pulls up to the levy in his fancy Jeep (as opposed to the working men who all drive pickup trucks), and leads a gang of men hellbent on destroying the levy, ruining the land, and driving the farmers out once and for all.

Tom makes an appeal to the men to not destroy the levy, just as the strikers once begged him not to cross the picket line. They refuse to listen because, as one man says, "We're hungry." They are doing everything they can to support their families, even if it means destroying some farmers' harvests. When your belly is empty it's hard to hold onto principles.

Eventually though, as you knew from the beginning, the levy is not destroyed and the men all come together to save the farms. They stick it to the capitalist and show him what true class solidarity is all about it. But our villain sees it another way. He doesn't admit defeat, he probably can't admit to such a thing. Instead, he gives one of the most chilling lines I've ever heard. He tells Tom Garvey that it doesn't matter if they stop the floods today. The river will never be tamed, rain will never stop, the fields are inevitably going to be destroyed. And in the final line of the movie, Joe Wade says, "I can wait."

And you know he's right. The farmers won't win. The working guys won't prevail. The capitalists are going to get their land and build their dam and control the power and the jobs. There won't be any little guys making it on their own, everything in the valley will have to go through the capitalists. Eventually, when the economy goes bust again, or something better comes along, they'll abandon the area and take the jobs away.

Meanwhile, the working class will be scrambling at the bottom, fighting amongst themselves for whatever scraps remain. The capitalists know this. They know that people will scab, even if it means taking food away from someone else. They know men will tear down a levy that will destroy farmers for decades if it means they can feed their families for another week.

Seeing your family suffer really does a number on the principles you once held dear. Your sphere of empathy narrows down, sometimes to only one person. Screw everyone else. The capitalists know this, and use this against you all of the time. You need their meager pay more than they need your labor because, at the end of the day, you're just a cog in a machine. A replaceable part.

There are limits to our solidarity because we live in a system designed to prevent unity. Everything is working against the billions of workers in the struggle against the handful of capitalists and imperialists. It need not be so.