The Wind That Shakes The Barley [DVD] [2006]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #3239 in DVD
- Released on: 2007-11-26
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 122 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Winner of the Palme d'Or at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival, this gripping drama by Ken Loach (Raining Stones) is set during the early days of the Irish Republican Army, when British occupation of the Irish radicalised many a citizen and caused some to take up arms. Cillian Murphy plays Damien, a medical student on his way to London when he witnesses a couple of atrocities committed by British troops. Instead of becoming a doctor, he turns into a leading and respected figure in an IRA division led by his brother, Teddy (Padraic Delaney).
Synopsis
Set in Cork, Ireland in 1920, Damien abandons a career as a doctor after seeing a friend of his murdered by a British soldier and joins his brother Teddy in an Irish Republican Army unit in order to defeat the occupying British force. After a violent struggle, the two sides agree a treaty to end the conflict. However, civil war erupts and families and friendships are stretched to the limit and Damien and Teddy find themselves on opposing sides as Damien views the treaty as a sell-out that fails to bring all of Ireland under Irish control. British director Ken Loach (KES, LAND AND FREEDOM) became the 59th winner of the Palme d'Or at Cannes with this emotional drama about the Irish Civil War of the 1920s and the film features superb performances from a young Irish cast.
Customer Reviews
Highly recommended.
This movie's central story is of two brothers on diverging political paths. Ken Loach presents us with a snap shot of the early days of the Irish freedom struggle in 1920 which casts forward the suggestion that any compromise with Britain is a betrayal.
As the British mercineries `Black and Tans' torture and murder their way through the Irish countryside two brothers (Cillian Murphy P.Delaney) are forced to join the IRA reluctantly.
As the story goes on Loach expertly shows us both sides of the conflict. He suggests that the British army were murderous in Ireland due to the 4 years of hell they suffered during WW1.
He also shows us the motives of the Irish IRA volunteers: "I studied Medicine for 5 years," says Cillian Murphy who puts aside dreams of becoming a doctor to fight for the cause. "Then I shoot a man; I hope that what we're fighting for is worth it."
This is Loach back to his Land and Freedom best; he is not the anti-Brit that some critics maintained. He is just playing his own brand of the patriot game.Highly recommended.
Five stars.
The Wind that Shakes the Barley follows the life of two young Irish brithers who are fighting for the IRA to win back freedom for their country. Damien (Cillian Murphy) has just finished is qualifications to be a doctor but is persuaded to join the small group of rebels, by his brother Teddy (Padraic Delany). But as different ideas of what a free Ireland is, turns into a civil war, the brothers are torn apart and families are turned aginst one another.
The acting in this film is very good (if not a little shouty in places), especially as most of them are volunteers. The story portrays a very realistic 1920's Ireland and the perminantly grey weather throughout strengthens that point. Cillian Murphy, Liam Cunningham and Padraic Delaney do well in their roles as the Irish rebels.
Ken Loach creates a film of depth and meaning and help you understand the troubles of what Irelnad went through. Loach has not created an Anti-British film, as some critics suggest, just shown it through the eyes of an Irishman who would obviuosly hate them.
Overall, A very good film. 8.5/10
A bitter conflict delivered by an expert
An excellent film highlighting the bleakness and inhumanity of oppression and the ensuing struggle as different factions try to broker some sort of peace out of the choas and end up being in conflict with each other.
The wider conflict is starkly represented by a farm house and it's occupants that is ravaged throughout the course of events.
Cillian Murphy was perfectly cast and helped ensure that Ken Loach delivered an exceptional and unforgettable piece.
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