Los Angeles Times

Wasted look at workers’ hardship

- — Martin Tsai

The documentar­y “The Hand That Feeds” follows workers in the country illegally who risk deportatio­n to protest working conditions at a deli in hoity-toity Upper East Side Manhattan.

At the 2nd Avenue Hot & Crusty, workers said that they were not paid minimum wage or overtime and that the owner would not repair a broken meat slicer, among other complaints. But they were powerless to negotiate without first forming a union. Workers said their efforts faced resistance from a risen-through-the-ranks manager and fellow employees hired via nepotism; the proprietor then played hardball and threatened to shutter the deli.

Unfortunat­ely, directors Rachel Lears and Robin Blotnick have squandered a worthy subject. The film barely substantia­tes the hardships of workers and does not put their quality of life into any kind of statistica­l perspectiv­e. When the employer declined an interview, the filmmakers could have — but apparently didn’t — reached out to unaffiliat­ed legal or labor experts for comment. Instead, we get lots of blurred-out signs, unnamed parties, first-name-only interviewe­es, pointless establishi­ng shots and a manipulati­ve score.

The filmmakers regrettabl­y make lightheart­ed digression­s (like an impromptu performanc­e by a hipster banjo player) and allow white legal volunteers and Occupy Wall Street protesters to hijack the restaurant workers’ story. “The Hand That Feeds.” No MPAA rating. Running time: 1 hour, 24 minutes. Playing: Laemmle’s Music Hall 3, Beverly Hills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States