1968. It's a man's world. But not for long. Set against the backdrop of the 1960s and based on a true story about a group of spirited women who joined forces, took a stand for what was right, and in doing so, found their own inner strength. Although far from the Swinging Sixties of Carnaby Street, life for the women of Dagenham, England is tinged with the sounds and sights of the optimistic era, heard on their radios and seen on their TV sets.
Rita O'Grady reflects that upbeat era, along with her friends and co-workers at the city's Ford Motor Factory: Sandra, Eileen, Brenda, Monica and Connie, who laugh in the face of their poor conditions. Lisa is a fiercely intelligent Cambridge-educated woman who feels a bit trapped, tending to the home with a husband that suggests she keep her opinions to herself. She may not live in the same world as the other women, but she shares their views. No one thought the revolution would come to Dagenham, until one day, it did.
Rita, who sees herself primarily as a wife and mother, is coerced into attending a meeting with shop steward Connie, sympathetic union representative Albert, and Peter Hopkins, Ford's Head of Industrial Relations. What she expects to be simply a day out of work, complete with a free lunch, turns into much more when she and her colleagues become outraged by the lack of respect shown in the meeting to the female employees. With humour, common sense and courage, Rita and the other women take on their bosses, an increasingly belligerent local community, and, finally the government, as their intelligence and unpredictability proves to be a match for any of their male counterparts. Daring to stand up and push boundaries, the women changed a system that no one wanted to admit was broken.
Cast
Sally Hawkins, Bob Hoskins, Miranda Richardson, Geraldine James, Rosamund Pike, Andrea Riseborough, Jaime Winstone, Daniel Mays, Richard Schiff
Directed by
Nigel Cole
Music
David Arnold