10,000 Black Men Named George (TV Movie 2002) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
13 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
A. Philip Randolph 1889-1979
bkoganbing3 January 2015
Watching a film like 10,000 Black Men Named George makes me regret that I do not have Showtime on my cable package. This film covers a portion of the life A. Philip Randolph up to the time he gained recognition from the Pullman company as its union for collective bargaining and registered it as such with the newly formed National Labor Relations Board during the New Deal. It may be said that Randolph was the one who was responsible for the wedding of organized labor to the civil rights movement. That was a contribution both singular and unique.

Andre Braugher produced as well as starred in this Paramount film for the Showtime network. His is a powerful performance of a man with a cause that would not quit. Charles Dutton and Mario Van Peebles play a pair of his organizing associates who come from different mindsets, but Randolph makes them effective organizers.

Kenneth MacGregor makes a frightening villain, a composite I'm sure of several in the management of the Pullman company which never had a great record with labor relations. Back in the day George Pullman who was a Republican party stalwart and associate in the day of Abraham Lincoln thought he was doing a great thing for newly freed slaves by offering them jobs at coolie wages as Pullman porters. At the time I'm sure that beat the zero wages and substandard room and board you got as a slave. But people generally have ambitions to better themselves. A point of view that oppressors without exception fail to grasp. And then they yell Socialist, Communist, whatever buzz word epithet is popular at the moment. Randolph in fact was a Socialist because Socialists and Communists were the only ones he saw addressing the needs of his people.

There is a touching performance by Brock Peters who nearly brings the organizing to a halt with his activities. His is the touching view of the newly freed slave who just wants to hang on to what he has or the Man will take it away. I'm sure many may have felt as he did.

Randolph lived long enough to be an integral part of the famous March on Washington from 1963. His emphasis was always on economics. Freedom is fine in the abstract, but without a chance at a living wage it really means nothing but freedom to starve wherever you are.

I can't recommend this film highly enough for young people who are interested in the civil rights era. The story of A. Philip Randolph and his work is essential to understand how civil rights came about.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
History All Should Know
aa43534 February 2007
This film is an excellent way to illustrate to the current generations that the historic struggle for civil rights started long before the 1960's. It is also interwoven with the labor movement of other workers and the treatment by big business. While historic, it may be wise for some to pay attention to the current standing of unions and to the fact that unions really made the middle class of today. The dirty tricks of the Pullman company including the "communist threat" are illustrated as they have been in past movies. The actors in this movie do a great job. Duton and Braugher offer stellar performances as usual. Director Ronert Townsend solidly directs the events .
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Unsung Hero
view_and_review8 March 2021
I only knew the name A. Philip Randolph consequentially. As I've read books about Black historical figures and Black history I've come across Randolph's name, but he's always been a tangential figure, almost a footnote. So, to see a movie dedicated to his work is very refreshing.

In the movie "10,000 Black Men Named George," Randolph is played by Andre Braugher who also helped produce the movie. It begins in 1925 with him being forced to step away from trying to unionize Black hotel workers. You have to understand how bitterly businesses hated unions back then. If forming a union was hard for whites, then it was life threatening for Blacks.

Still, as the movie tells it, A. Philip Randolph was approached by a Pullman Porter named Ashley Totten (Mario Van Peebles) about unionizing. The Pullman Sleeping Car workers were almost all Black men disrespectfully and eponymously named George after George Pullman. They were porters on various passenger train routes throughout the country that used sleeping cars made by George Pullman. They dressed sharply and were respected in their communities, yet at work they were no more than butlers on trains who were subjected to all kinds of degradation. Unionizing the Pullman Porters was going to be a gargantuan task.

"10,000 Men" took us through that fight. We didn't get to see every detail of the battle, but we got a high-level understanding of what the Pullman Porters were up against. As expected, "10,000 Men" will make you angry, but this is a story of triumph and a small tribute to Randolph as well as the many other men who banded together against a tyrannical big business.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Very Interesting Historical Docudrama
calspace27 December 2003
This movie is a little choppy, but you try fitting 20 years of turbulent history into a two hour movie. If you don't know about other things happenning during the same period (the Great Depression, for example) the allusions to its effects on the primary storyline are hard to follow. I'd like to see this done as a mini-series, with about ten hours or so to tell the story in full.

Still, if you think that the civil rights movement began with the Montgomery Bus Boycott, you will find this movie fascinating. The drive to organize the African-American porters combines civil rights and workers' rights with historical perspectives on the late 1920's and 1930's.

One thing that struck me about this movie is the presence of benevolent White characters. In many African-American rights movies, all Whites are either evil or ineffectual morons. (Think the White assistant principal in Lean on Me). There are many White racists in the role of antagonists in this movie, but there is also the White rep for the AFL, who works to support the growing union.
14 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent!! A must see!
ashardy5 January 2005
This movie is about history. Anyone who is interested in African American History or US History in general must see this movie. This movie shows things that we don't learn in our school system or in black history in general. I stumbled upon this movie at the video store looking for a movie to rent. For me it adds to the fight that African Americans have had to go through in the United States. Everything we have has been fought for. Nothing has come easy. All African Americans need to know about the Porters Union - the Brotherhood. This knowledge invigorates and empowers me. I am learning all I can about my history, because no one else is going to teach me. I then have to teach my kids. Thank you for making this movie.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Winning the fight against injustice has to start somewhere, and there are always losses along the way.
mark.waltz18 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
With the degrading nickname of "George" given to the thousands of hardworking dignified black Pullman porters on the luxury trains of decades gone by, the need for a union had to be fought due to the lack of protections they had. These men put up with all sorts of degrading treatment, from thieving passengers, drunk white college students testing them and white women trying to get them into bed, and no protection from legitimate complaints. Pullman through his large number of thugs threatened and beat those who sided with the creation of a union, and it's through the perseverance of leaders Andre Braugher and Charles D. Dutton and the few powerful white men on their legal team (who saw their issues as legit) that the union could be created.

When Braugher has to force a nude white woman to take her hands off of him, the shock is real because the fear of him being accused of attempted rape seems real. Fortunately, the story doesn't go in that direction, and it's his integrity that has him getting away and doing something to instigate change. But there's a betrayal within their ranks, and the culprit is a shocker. A well written, beautifully detailed history lesson, this shows another issue of the turbulent 1930's that led the way for more civil rights. Veteran actors Brock Peters, Ellen Holly, Ernestine Jackson and Mario Van Peebles round out a great ensemble. The indignities of Pullman porter treatment has been glossed over in classic movies (they all seem to be treated nicely), but this sheds light on the truths often overlooked.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent
djohnsonc17 February 2003
A very moving and thoughtful film. The script, direction and performances of Dutton and Brauher were exceptional. This is a part of history most people don't know much about and Townsand really pulled off an emotionally satisfying story. four stars
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Well Done
mugwump4526 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Just saw this apparently little publicized gem on cable this morning. Thought it was well written and acted. I enjoyed learning the story of the men who fought so hard for recognition and respect. I would have liked a bit more character development of some of the peripheral figures, but with the time constraints I believe it was an excellent job. Randolph is viewed as the inspiration for much of the civil rights movement in later years - according to the AFL/CIO website (http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/history/history/randolph.cfm), so I am assuming the story was pretty accurate as presented. It's too bad school children aren't taught this side of history.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Just this side of endurable
colinfaggypants25 November 2007
The concept/subject of this movie is great. We need more films about movements for social justice. The costumes are excellent, and the score is enjoyable. That being said, the acting, script, and directing were terrible. In the lead role, Andre Braugher attempts to deliver a performance of understated dignity but instead comes across as flat and unemotional. On the opposite end of bad acting, Charles Dutton shouts every line to try to convey a "larger than life" character. Some of the lines were laughably bad, and i felt sympathy that the actors had to work with that material. I *really* wanted to like this movie, and i guess it's something that I stuck with it to the bitter end. Perhaps worth enduring for its subject matter, but good luck.
3 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Moved me to tears
idadaspida310 November 2021
I pretty much knew the story about the Pullman porters but to see it in action and in reality just sent chills all through my body. Oh the struggles of our people. And I can't believe that we are still going through racial issues. Awesome awesome movie my favorites Andre Braugher, Charles Dutton and Mario Van peoples. All black people should see this movie.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
The miscasting of Black women
mdjohnson-732666 November 2019
It doesn't matter what the context, you can damn sure count on black male filmmakers to always cast bi-racial women as black women. In this film, Asa Phillip Randolph's wife, Lucille, is bi-racial. Leon Frey's wife is bi-racial and so is the young waitress who is Rocky Carroll obsesses over. Townsend pulled the same BS in Five Heartbeats by casting Carla Brooks as a black woman.
1 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Good story, good direction
Sleepy-1711 March 2002
Enjoyable civil rights saga. While this genre usually has excessive sincerity and unbelievably saintly protagonists, the saga of black civil rights is the great epic of the American 20th century, and it's always stirring to watch. Braugher and Dutton give good performances, the whole thing holds together pretty well. Good background score. Well worth its 90 minutes.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Movie theatres should make more movies like 10,000 Black Men Named George
BizzyMoney27 December 2003
This is the type of movie that does exactly what movies are suppose to do and that's keep you watching. Again Robert Townsend pulled off another dramatic work of motion picture art. The cast is splendid and the dialogue geniune. This is a good looking movie that keeps you on pins till the end. Watching Charles Dutton act in this movie is just wonderful. It's real drama.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed