How Ken Loach captured the emotional fallout of… | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

How Ken Loach cap­tured the emo­tion­al fall­out of the Span­ish Civ­il War

18 Jul 2016

Words by James Clarke

A group of men in military uniforms, some wielding rifles, stand in a crowd of people in an outdoor setting. The scene appears to depict a historical or political event.
A group of men in military uniforms, some wielding rifles, stand in a crowd of people in an outdoor setting. The scene appears to depict a historical or political event.
Land and Free­dom shows the per­son­al and polit­i­cal sides of this 80-year-old conflict.

City set­tings have long been syn­ony­mous with the films of Ken Loach. There are, how­ev­er, a hand­ful of the vet­er­an director’s films in which the dra­ma unfolds in rur­al, rather than urban, land­scapes. The Wind That Shakes the Bar­ley, Jimmy’s Hall and Land and Free­dom fit togeth­er as an infor­mal rur­al tril­o­gy, but it’s the lat­ter film – on the 80th anniver­sary of the start of the Span­ish Civ­il War – that feels espe­cial­ly rel­e­vant today.

Land and Free­dom is Loach and screen­writer Jim Allen’s pars­ing of the upris­ing against the forces of fas­cism. At the time of its orig­i­nal release in 1995, it was Loach’s first peri­od film, hav­ing been devel­oped by the pair dur­ing the ear­ly 90s in the wake of the fall of com­mu­nism across East­ern Europe. As they devel­oped the con­cept, Loach and Allen con­sid­ered hav­ing the film inter­cut between the dra­mat­ic sto­ry being told and new­ly filmed inter­views with peo­ple who had fought in the Span­ish Civ­il War.

Although not wide­ly dis­cussed in rela­tion to Loach’s work, his films have always had a dis­tinct visu­al style. They also pos­sess a cer­tain nar­ra­tive famil­iar­i­ty, the core of his social­ly com­mit­ted work often hing­ing on a sim­ple love sto­ry. An exam­ple of this device, Land and Free­dom allows for the polit­i­cal to become per­son­al and for the sto­ry to serve as a lens through which to bet­ter under­stand this par­tic­u­lar peri­od of social and polit­i­cal turmoil.

Land and Free­dom tells the sto­ry of a young man named David Carr (Ian Hart) who enlists to fight Gen­er­al Franco’s forces. The his­tor­i­cal record shows that some­where in the region of 4,000 British men were sent to Spain to com­bat the anti-fas­cist move­ment. A fea­ture of the war explored here is the role of poor rur­al Span­ish com­mu­ni­ties in the war. There were five to sev­en mil­lion peas­ants involved in the rev­o­lu­tion and, in the Aragon region where Land and Free­dom is set, this com­mit­ment was ener­gised and vital. Mid­way through the film a debate breaks out among a group of vil­lagers. What could so eas­i­ly feel didac­tic is instead dra­mat­i­cal­ly engag­ing, reaf­firm­ing how acute­ly Loach’s sto­ry­telling flip-flops between the per­son­al and the political.

Land and Free­dom cer­tain­ly doesn’t hold back in voic­ing its polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tion, mak­ing the point that front­line com­bat is a des­per­ate last resort in a bat­tle of war­ring ide­olo­gies. In his 2002 book The Cin­e­ma of Ken Loach’, Jacob Leigh notes that, Each char­ac­ter rep­re­sents part of a larg­er whole, and the film uses David’s [inter­ac­tions] to show his moral growth in Spain.” By fram­ing the sto­ry with a scene show­ing David’s grand­daugh­ter read­ing his let­ters about his expe­ri­ences, the film recog­nis­es the need for each new gen­er­a­tion to be polit­i­cal­ly engaged. As David’s clos­ing voiceover has it, Rev­o­lu­tions are contagious.”

Loach ensures that the more overt dra­mat­ic ele­ments are art­ful­ly bal­anced, as the sto­ry moves back-and-forth between David’s devel­op­ing sense of the com­plex­i­ties of war, his bur­geon­ing romance with a Span­ish woman named Blan­ca (Rosana Pas­tor), and the fury of com­bat. Impor­tant­ly, though, the film’s recre­ation of key bat­tles empha­sis­es the emo­tion­al fall­out of an exchange of fire. The cam­era remains at a dis­tance from the action. There is a plain, unfussy style to Loach’s war film and it’s enriched even fur­ther by the struc­tur­al deci­sion to weave in sev­er­al acces­si­ble dis­cus­sions about what is real­ly at stake.

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