Chicago Sun-Times

A town relives its darkest day

- BY BILL GOODYKOONT­Z USA TODAY Network

Bisbee, Arizona, has a rich history of mining, back when mining was a source of riches. But as we learn in “Bisbee ’17,” Robert Greene’s innovative documentar­y that incorporat­es dramatic re-creation with more traditiona­l fact-finding, there’s a lot more to its history, not all of it good.

If you didn’t know that, that’s by design. While not exactly a secret, certainly the Bisbee Deportatio­n isn’t something you’d find on a Chamber of Commerce flyer. Greene traces the history — “a genuine American tragedy,” according to someone in the film — while simultaneo­usly documentin­g the town’s restaging of the event in 2017, its 100th anniversar­y.

Bisbee was a mining hub when demand for copper was great. But when the

Industrial Workers of the World organized workers, the mine owners didn’t take kindly to union action.

Miners planned a strike in 1917. The sheriff quickly deputized many of the town’s citizens — more than 2,000 — to round up about 1,300 striking workers. The strikebrea­kers took the miners to Warren Ballpark, which still stands; whoever didn’t go back to work got loaded onto boxcars and transporte­d to New Mexico, with a warning that if they ever returned they would be killed.

Most of the miners were from Mexico or Europe. Racism clearly played a role. But the dispute also pitted brother against brother; one man arrested his own brother at gunpoint, marched him to the baseball field and loaded him on the train. We meet their descendant­s in the film.

Tempers cool over the course of a century, and it’s never Greene’s intention to reopen old wounds. In fact, in some respects “Bisbee ’17” serves as a kind of therapy for the town. But it’s still difficult material. Greene follows Bisbee’s decision to reenact the deportatio­n, a brilliant move that allows residents to talk about the event as they prepare to act it out, some learning as they go along.

It’s fascinatin­g to watch them work out conflictin­g feelings. Some people side with the mines — they thought unionizing would break Bisbee’s lifeline. Others still struggle to reconcile how the town could simply erase 1,300 people and go about its business. It’s a civic production with primitive staging and props, but somehow it’s all the more effective for that — and more cathartic.

If Greene had simply told the story in more straightfo­rward documentar­y fashion, “Bisbee ’17” would be an interestin­g film. By telling the story within the story, he’s done something more: He’s made an urgent, powerful one.

Director Robert Greene will appear for a Q&A after the 7 p.m. Oct. 5 screening at the Music Box.

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