Films and television Independent filmmakers documented the strike including the behaviour of the police, the role of miners' wives and the role of the media. The outcome was the Miner's Campaign Tapes.
Ken Loach made three films about the strike.
Which Side Are You On? focussed on music and poetry was made for
The South Bank Show but was rejected on the grounds that it was too politically partial for an arts programme. After winning an award at an Italian film festival, it was broadcast on Channel 4 on 9 January 1985.
The Arthur Legend, broadcast for
Dispatches on Channel 4 in 1991, analysed allegations of financial impropriety and links with Libya against Arthur Scargill, and argued that the claims made by the
Daily Mirror and
The Cook Report were baseless. The setting for the 1986
anime film
Castle in the Sky was inspired by the Welsh strikes. Director
Hayao Miyazaki was visiting Wales at the time, and was impressed by the way the Welsh miners fought to save their way of life, and their sense of community. The 2000 film
Billy Elliot, set in 1984, was based around mining communities in
Easington Colliery and
Seaham. The father and brother of the title character are striking miners. Several scenes depict the chaos at picket lines, clashes between armies of police and striking miners, and the shame associated with crossing the picket line. It showed the abject poverty associated with the strike and the harshness and desperation of not having coal for heat in winter. The film was turned into a musical,
Billy Elliot the Musical with music by
Elton John and book and lyrics by
Lee Hall, who wrote the film's screenplay. The 1996 film
Brassed Off was set 10 years after the strike in the era when numerous pits closed before the privatisation of British Coal. The film refers to the strike and some of the dialogue contrasts the resistance in 1984 with the resignation with which most miners responded to the pit closures of the early 1990s. It was set in the fictional town of Grimley, a thin disguise for the hard-hit ex-mining village of Grimethorpe, where some of it was filmed. The satirical
Comic Strip Presents episode "
The Strike" (1988) depicts an idealistic Welsh screenwriter's growing dismay as his hard-hitting and grittily realistic script about the strike is mutilated by a
Hollywood producer into an all-action thriller. The film parodies Hollywood films by overdramatising the strike and changing most of the important historic facts. It won a
Golden Rose and Press Reward at the
Montreux Festival. The "1984" episode of the 1996
BBC television drama serial
Our Friends in the North revolves around the strike, and scenes of clashes between the police and strikers were re-created using many men who had taken part in the real-life events on the miners' side. In 2005, BBC One broadcast the one-off drama
Faith, written by
William Ivory. Many of the social scenes were filmed in the former colliery town of Thorne, near Doncaster. It viewed the strike from the perspective of both the police and the miners. The British film
The Big Man casts
Liam Neeson as a Scottish coalminer who has been unemployed since the strike. His character has been blacklisted due to striking a police officer and has served a six-month prison sentence for the offence. The 2014 film
Pride, directed by
Matthew Warchus, is based on a true story of a group of LGBT activists who raised funds to assist and support families in a Welsh mining village. David Peace's novel
GB84 is set during the strike.
Val McDermid's novel
A Darker Domain (2008) has a plotline set in the strike. Multiple reviewers gave the book acclaim for exploring its social and emotional repercussions. Kay Sutcliffe, the wife of a striking miner at
Aylesham, wrote the poem "Coal not Dole", which became popular with the
Women Against Pit Closures groups across the country and was later made into a song by Norma Waterson. The verse novel
Hope Now by A. L. Richards, published 2013 by Landfox Press, is set in the South Wales Valleys and is based on events during the strike. In 2001, British visual artist
Jeremy Deller worked with historical societies, battle re-enactors, and people who participated in the violent 1984 clashes between picketers and police to reconstruct and re-enact the Battle of Orgreave. A documentary about the re-enactment was produced by Deller and director Mike Figgis and was broadcast on British television; and Deller published a book called
The English Civil War Part II documenting both the project and the historical events it investigates. On 5 March 2010, the 25th anniversary of the strike, an artwork by visual artist Dan Savage was unveiled in
Sunderland Civic Centre. Commissioned by Sunderland City Council, Savage worked with the Durham Miners Association to create the large scale commemorative window, which features images and symbols of the strike and the North East's mining heritage. In August 1984, photographer Keith Pattison was commissioned by Sunderland's Artists' Agency to photograph the strike in Easington Colliery for a month. He remained there on and off until it ended in March 1985, photographing from behind the lines a community rallying together against implacable opposition. Twenty-five years later, on 6 May 2010, Election Day, Pattison took David Peace to Easington to interview three of the people caught up in the strike. A selection of the photographs together with the interviews were published in book form – 'No Redemption' (Flambard Press). Premiering on 13 June 2022, the BBC One series
Sherwood is a fictionalized murder mystery set both in 1984 and in the present day in the
Ashfield area of Nottinghamshire surrounding deep divisions in the community between striking miners, police officers, non-striking miners, and their descendants. In 2024 a documentary film about the strikes was shown on
BBC Two, called ''
Miners' Strike: A Frontline Story''. The documentary was directed by Ben Anthony and presented both archive footage and stories from individuals directly involved in the strike.
Music The Clash staged two benefit concerts for the striking miners at
Brixton Academy in London. The strike is the subject of songs by many music groups including the
Manic Street Preachers' "
A Design for Life", and "1985", from the album
Lifeblood;
Pulp's "
Last Day of the Miners' Strike";
Funeral for a Friend's "
History", and
Ewan MacColl's cassette of pro-NUM songs
Daddy, What Did You Do In The Strike?.
Sting recorded a song about the strike called "
We Work the Black Seam" for his first solo album,
The Dream of the Blue Turtles, in 1985.
Billy Bragg's version of "
Which Side Are You On?", encapsulated the strikers' feeling of betrayal by the perceived indifference of wider elements within British society. Bragg raised awareness through his music and disagreement with the Thatcher government. Crowd sounds from the strike feature at the start of
The Smiths' 1987 song "
Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me". However, this version only appears on the album
Strangeways, Here We Come and not the single edit which has made subsequent compilation albums. Throughout the strike, the South London group
Test Dept travelled on their "battle bus" to Yorkshire, Durham, Northumberland, Paddington and Glasgow. They filmed images of the strike in one town and showed at their next gig, where they met the miners, joined pickets and raised funds. The songs of the South Wales Striking Miners' Choir and the speeches of Kent miner Alan Sutcliffe are included on their 1985 album
Shoulder to Shoulder.
Chris Cutler,
Tim Hodgkinson and
Lindsay Cooper from
Henry Cow, along with
Robert Wyatt and poet
Adrian Mitchell recorded
The Last Nightingale in October 1984 to raise money for the strikers and their families. "
Red Hill Mining Town", by
U2 is about the breakdown of relationships during the strike. The storyline of
Radio K.A.O.S., a 1987 album by
Roger Waters, makes several references to the strike and its repercussions. The strike saw the resurgence of traditional folk songs about coal mining.
Dick Gaughan released a mixture of old and new songs on his LP
True and Bold. An old Northumbrian folk song, "
Blackleg Miner" gained attention when recorded by
Steeleye Span in 1970 and was played to show support for the NUM and intimidate strikebreakers. "The Charge", from
New Model Army (on
Thunder and Consolation, 1989) compares the Miners' strike to "
The charge of the Light Brigade".
Video games The first entry in the
Monty Mole series of games,
Wanted: Monty Mole, published for the
ZX Spectrum and
Commodore 64 in 1984, was directly inspired by reports of miners' families' stealing coal during the strike: the game involves Monty Mole stealing coal to heat his home.
Literature The historical fiction novel "Minor Miner" by
Matthew Morgan is a conspiracy drama in which the Thatcher government intentionally escalates tensions with
Libya in 1984 to draw attention away from the controversial UK Miners' Strikes in an attempt to improve the political party's approval ratings ahead of an election.
Tabletop games The miner's strike was satirized in the 1986
Warhammer Fantasy Battles scenario pack The Tragedy Of McDeath, which featured dwarf miners led by a dwarf named Arka Zargul, referencing Arthur Scargill. The enemy of the dwarf miners was a man called Een McWrecker, based on Ian MacGregor. ==See also==