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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
The Wind that Shakes the Barley
Shakes class lines
By
CHRIS WANGLER
|
March 15, 2007
THE WIND THAT SHAKES THE BARLEY
3.5
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for The Wind that Shakes the Barley
“With breaking heart when e’er I hear the wind that shakes the barley.”
The Palme d’Or winner at Cannes 2006, Ken Loach’s drama explores the tensions within an IRA guerrilla unit during the rebellion of 1920-’21. Two brothers (Cillian Murphy and Padraic Delaney), initially compatriots in a series of brazen ambushes, end up on opposing sides after the Republican leaders sign what some perceive as an unequal treaty with the British. The diminutive Murphy is powerfully understated as a conflicted medical student expected to commit acts of brutal violence; his patriotic speeches sparkle. Behind him is a cast of Loachian characters (teenage soldiers, farmhands, maids) who give voice to the director’s socialist reading of history. Although unfairly anti-British (the Black and Tans seem worse than Nazis), this is class-based filmmaking at its very best — a kind of rural counterpart to Neil Jordan’s film
Michael Collins
, with timely lessons about terrorism, poverty, and the long shadows of empire.
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It’s spring, and Hollywood has to get the kinks out of its system before it can focus on the business at hand: the sequels of summer.
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In the 1980s in Northern Ireland, a petty hustler named Martin McGartland (Jim Sturgess) went from street-corner obscurity to playing a major role in the war in Belfast between Catholics and Protestants, as he swore allegiance to the militant branch of the IRA while spying for the British police.
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Like Eric (Steve Evets), the depressive Manchester postman in his new film, Ken Loach, the doyen of British neo-realism, deserves a break.
Sound bites
In space, so the tag line for Ridley Scott’s 1979 sci-fi thriller Alien goes, nobody can hear you scream.
Firewall
You could trace a history of American anxiety through the bad guys Harrison Ford has had to fight to protect his on-screen family: industrialization in The Mosquito Coast (1987), the IRA in Patriot Games (1992), Russian terrorists in Air Force One (1997), himself in What Lies Beneath (2000).
Crossword: 'Farewell, Pluto'
Gone from the lineup, but not forgotten
Pedro, Borat, and a castrato
As usual, dedicated film critics were too occupied seeing four or five movies a day to note the swarm of A-list celebrities at the 31st Toronto International Film Festival.
Crossword: 'Conventional labels'
They make it easier to meet and greet
New to DVD for the week of January 13, 2006
The Constant Gardener, Red Eye, Saraband , and Transporter 2
Crusaders
Broadway is strewn with the banana peel of Arthurian legend.
Te Doy Mis Ojos | Take My Eyes
Born as much from her 2000 20-minute short “Amores que matan|Loves That Kill” as from her love for the films of Ken Loach, director and co-writer Icíar Bollaín’s acute, (almost) thoughtful look at domestic abuse details the struggles of housewife Pilar and her time-bomb husband, Antonio.
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ARTICLES BY CHRIS WANGLER
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| April 21, 2009
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What lifts this tasty little dramedy above Sundance mediocrity is a pathos that overcomes all the "quirky" dysfunctional contrivance.
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CADILLAC RECORDS
| December 12, 2008
Cadillac Records writer/director Darnell Martin lets the music speak for itself
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CHRIS WANGLER
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