The Wind That Shakes the Barley isn't interested in being a straightforward or romanticized history lesson. Rather, [director] Loach offers an examination of the very nature of rebellion, as filtered through the particulars of the Irish troubles.
The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2007)
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Reviews Counted:108
Fresh:95
Rotten:13
Average Rating:7.6/10
Consensus: Bleak and uncompromising, but director Ken Loach brightens his film with gorgeous cinematography and tight pacing, and features a fine performance from Cillian Murphy.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for crude and sexual humor, language, a comic violent image and some drug references
Runtime: 2 hrs 7 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Mar 16, 2007 Limited
Box Office: $1,779,320
Synopsis: Set in 1916 in Ireland, THE WIND THAT SHAKES THE BARLEY is the story of Damien (Cillain Murphy), a young Irishman about to fulfill his lifelong dream of becoming a doctor. When his friend is... Set in 1916 in Ireland, THE WIND THAT SHAKES THE BARLEY is the story of Damien (Cillain Murphy), a young Irishman about to fulfill his lifelong dream of becoming a doctor. When his friend is brutally murdered for standing up to a band of British soldiers, Damien abandons his medical career and joins his brother Teddy (Padraic Delany) in the fight for freedom. Small guerrilla groups of Irish farmers begin to wage bloody attacks, forcing the government to negotiate a ceasefire. The Anglo-Irish Peace Treaty is offered, but it puts Teddy and Damien at odds. Teddy believes they should accept the treaty and try to work within the system to avoid further bloodshed, while Damien thinks they should continue to fight until they are completely free of British rule. Whereas the two brothers used to fight side by side, they now find themselves divided, and forced to choose between their familial bond and their ardent beliefs. Murphy and Delany both give standout performances as the battling brothers. Murphy flashes his otherworldly blue eyes and conveys his character's fierce intellect, as well as the deep sadness of his struggle. Delany, for his part, tries to come off as all brawn and bravery, but cannot conceal his sensitive heart--his face glows with rage one minute, then crumples into sorrow the next. Director Ken Loach, who won the Palme d'Or for the film, has created a deeply personal war story, with an attention to detail that is heartbreaking in its realism. The sight of the young men training for battle with hurley bats instead of rifles will make the viewer gasp at the disparity between the warring sides. While some might flinch at the graphic violence depicted, the film stands strong as a raw, human portrait of a deeply troubled moment in history. [More]
Starring: Cillian Murphy, Liam Cunningham, William Ruane, Gerard Kearney
Starring: Cillian Murphy, Liam Cunningham, William Ruane, Gerard Kearney, Padraic Delaney, Roger Allam, Orla Fitzgerald
Director: Ken Loach
Director: Ken Loach
Screenwriter: Paul Laverty
Producer: Rebecca O'Brien
Composer: George Fenton
Studio: Paramount Pictures
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Reviews for The Wind That Shakes the Barley
Though Loach's film loses some of its dramatic impetus in the second half, it illuminates the events that led to eight decades of tortured Irish history.
The humanity that Loach and his compassionate screenwriter bring to their story prevents it from being another polemic about how the British screwed Ireland.
Loach manages to depict the film's violence, romance, action and politics each with the same gravity and dignity. It's a crowning achievement.
Director Ken Loach is full of astonishments. In this film, he stages raid and counter-raid, big gunfight and small, with stunning dynamism.
Will only satisfy anyone whose preferred source of entertainment is watching A&E.
Un crudo relato sobre el movimiento independentista irlandés que confirma a Ken Loach como cineasta comprometido con la historia reciente y las injusticias.
Bid for a genuine sense of history unraveling as strict realism, with currents of immense human heroism and courageous suffering in wartime.
Great film. Ken Loach is such an important filmmaker, he’s made so many great films over the years, and it’s great to see another director, like Eastwood and so many others in his 70’s, who continues to be at the top of his game.
Winner of the Best Film at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival, this powerful political saga is not merely a cinematic masterpiece from start to finish but a righteous rallying cry for disenfranchised masses anywhere with nothing left to lose but their chains.
At 124 minutes, the heartfelt drama comes across as pedantic and tedious. Cillian Murpy, fortunately, is such a fine actor, that by the end, his presence accomplishes Loach's mission. He makes the film work.
The grain of the title puts me in mind of everything that nourishes you in the film: its frankness, probity, care and intelligence, offered not just in crumbs but as a whole loaf. I wish this could be our daily bread.
Though the film uses a familiar narrative form -- two brothers torn apart -- it does so in a way that leaves the form itself in doubt, heroizing no one, offering no resolution.
This dramatization of Ireland’s early struggles for independence falls short of a certain originality or flair.
[Director] Loach and [co-screenwriter] Laverty are still capable of creating moments startling in their naturalism -- almost like a window into the past.
The film’s star refused to comment on the similarities between Ireland and Iraq when he spoke to journalists, but we couldn’t help talking amongst ourselves.
... you can feel the panic, rage and fear of the participants, and there's a rare sense in the movie of history being less recreated than relived.
... despite its length (over two hours) and some structural problems, it is an absorbing, worthwhile and often passionate movie.
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