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IMDbPro

Ventos da Liberdade

Título original: The Wind That Shakes the Barley
  • 2006
  • Not Rated
  • 2 h 7 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,5/10
57 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.540
496
Ventos da Liberdade (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from IFC
Reproduzir trailer2:16
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
Period DramaDramaWar

Tendo como pano de fundo a Guerra da Independência da Irlanda, dois irmãos lutam uma guerra de guerrilha contra as forças britânicas.Tendo como pano de fundo a Guerra da Independência da Irlanda, dois irmãos lutam uma guerra de guerrilha contra as forças britânicas.Tendo como pano de fundo a Guerra da Independência da Irlanda, dois irmãos lutam uma guerra de guerrilha contra as forças britânicas.

  • Direção
    • Ken Loach
  • Roteirista
    • Paul Laverty
  • Artistas
    • Cillian Murphy
    • Pádraic Delaney
    • Liam Cunningham
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,5/10
    57 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.540
    496
    • Direção
      • Ken Loach
    • Roteirista
      • Paul Laverty
    • Artistas
      • Cillian Murphy
      • Pádraic Delaney
      • Liam Cunningham
    • 259Avaliações de usuários
    • 92Avaliações da crítica
    • 82Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 7 vitórias e 24 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    The Wind That Shakes the Barley
    Trailer 2:16
    The Wind That Shakes the Barley

    Fotos116

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    Elenco principal86

    Editar
    Cillian Murphy
    Cillian Murphy
    • Damien
    Pádraic Delaney
    Pádraic Delaney
    • Teddy
    Liam Cunningham
    Liam Cunningham
    • Dan
    Orla Fitzgerald
    Orla Fitzgerald
    • Sinead
    Mary O'Riordan
    • Peggy
    • (as Mary Riordan)
    Mary Murphy
    • Bernadette
    Laurence Barry
    • Micheail
    Damien Kearney
    • Finbar - Volunteer
    Frank Bourke
    Frank Bourke
    • Leo - Volunteer
    Myles Horgan
    • Rory - Volunteer
    Martin Lucey
    • Congo - Volunteer
    Aidan O'Hare
    Aidan O'Hare
    • Steady Boy - Volunteer
    Shane Casey
    • Kevin - Volunteer
    John Crean
    • Chris - Volunteer
    Máirtín de Cógáin
    • Sean - Volunteer
    • (as Mairtin de Cogain)
    Keith Dunphy
    • Terence - Volunteer
    Kieran Hegarty
    • Francis - Volunteer
    Gerard Kearney
    • Donacha - Volunteer
    • Direção
      • Ken Loach
    • Roteirista
      • Paul Laverty
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários259

    7,557K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8donalflynn2002

    Some comments on technicalities

    My family came from Clonakilty and were directly involved in the events portrayed. The film struck an authentic note in portraying the young men and their fight. Of course the British forces were shown as monsters in the film as part of the mode of telling the tale, but growing up listening to the stories of the fighters, tales of atrocities did not feature.

    The technical detail in the film was accurate and quite excellent and for that reason it may be of interest to point out three anomalies.

    First: the men sung the present Irish National Anthem when they were held in the barracks and they sung it using Irish (Gaelic) words. In fact, the popular republican song which became the National Anthem was called The Soldiers' Song and the words were (of course)in English. They went:

    Soldiers are we, Whose lives are pledged to Ireland, Some have come, From a land beyond the waves, Sworn to be free, Once more our ancient sire land, Etc

    The Gaelic words were not written until ten or fifteen years later and were then promoted by Government as part of the fiction of Ireland being Gaelic speaking. When I was in school in the 1940's we learned the original English version and although nowadays the schools teach the Gaelic words, very few people retain them.

    Second: after the men came in from the ambush they were fed at the farmhouse, eating from round bowls. I never saw such a dish in use in Ireland until people started going to Spain on their holidays in the 1960's. We used flat plated or flat-bottomed soup plates.

    Third: When asked when he was leaving for England, the young doctor said "at the weekend". He would have said "on Saturday" or "on Sunday". The word "weekend" meaning a segment of time only arrived when the weekend became a defined segment of time. When small farmers worked a seven day week, they had no "weekends" and did not have a word for them in everyday usage.

    My word for this film is 'evocative'and it with this sense that it should be watched.
    10briandelaney

    Great film

    This is a truly great film and well deserving of the Palm D'Or.

    It has been said that it is pro IRA or IRA propaganda. I disagree. In fact I think the reverse is the case. It shows up both the brutality of war and the even greater brutality of civil war that sets nation against nation and brother against brother. The film provides an understanding of how Ireland became independent in 1920-1921. It is well documented (e.g. visit the BBC or CAIN websites) that the Black and Tans were a brutal and oppressive irregular force sent to put down the rebellion. The IRA reacted with similar brutality. The film records both with equally graphic scenes. But that is only the first half of the film. The second half deals with the civil war. That's even more tragic and brutal.

    Who was on the right side or the wrong side? The film presents the arguments but I really don't think the film takes sides. More of the anti British and anti treaty argument is advanced. But this is understandable because it is historically accurate that West Cost was ferociously anti British and mainly anti treaty. That's why Michael Collins was destined to die there. And it is more important to understand why people/nations go to war or civil war rather than why they don't.

    Understanding the reasons does not mean support for war. The film highlights the futility and awfulness of war. Misery destruction and death. Is there such a thing as a just war (apart from 2nd World war)? Aside from the historical debate, the story, filming and acting is magnificent. Much better than the Green Berets on the just war by USA in Vietnam! Blackhawk Down brilliantly covered Somalia from the external US perspective. This film brilliantly covers the 1920/21 wars from the Irish perspective. We need all perspectives.

    Well worth seeing with an open mind. Then read the history if you want.
    9zogz54

    One of Loach's best

    The remarkably low rating that this film has so far received (4.1 as of Thursday 8th of June) is indicative of its ability to raise the hackles of people who haven't even seen it. How can it be otherwise when the film has not yet been released? 135 people have voted; have all of these 135 people actually watched the film? Of course not. They're just voting on the basis of their perceptions or assumptions concerning its political agenda. IMDb voters are not alone in this; already Simon Heffer in The Daily Telegraph, Dominic Lawson in The Independent, Ruth Dudley-Edwards in The Daily Mail and Michael Gove in The Times are attacking a film they haven't seen (by their own admission). These attacks are the predictable reaction of empire apologists unable to abide the depiction of the dark and brutal underside of that imperial machine, or the suggestion that anyone on the receiving end of that brutality might be justified in rebelling against it. The title of Dudley-Edward's lazy hack-job says it all, really: 'Why does Ken Loach loathe his country?' Loach is a traitor, and must be punished, the rotter.

    It's a pity that this political controversy seems poised to overwhelm discussion of the film, because it's an extremely able piece of cinema and deserves to be seen as such. Barry Ackroyd's cinematography is superb, ably capturing the beauty of the Irish countryside without indulging in it. We are rooted in a locale without being lavished with pretty pictures. The acting is also excellent. The charismatic Cillian Murphy carries the movie, but the support from Liam Cunningham, Orla Fitzgerald, Aidan O'Hare and Padraic Delaney is also commendable.

    But it's the collaboration between Loach and his scriptwriter Paul Laverty that makes the film something like a masterpiece. The grim progress from the murder of an Irish youth to the growth of an armed I.R.A. campaign, with its attendant violence (shown in stark and horrifying detail) is expertly managed; the only let-up comes not far from the end, after the signing of the 1921 peace treaty. Loach tries to show the brief jubilation and relief that ensues, but in terms of momentum almost drops the ball. The pace is re-established in time for the inexorable tragic denouement, and the film's final emotional impact is considerable. The load is occasionally lightened by the odd touch of Loach's characteristic wry comedy, such as the belligerence of the opening hurling game, the teenage message-boy who loses his message, the melodramatic pianist accompanying the newsreel announcing the momentous news of the creation of the Free State.

    One of the most disturbing scenes occurs when a group of I.R.A. men return from a successful battle and discover a farmhouse being attacked and destroyed by a group of British soldiers. The rebels, who have no ammunition left, are forced to look on, concealed in the bushes; they watch powerless as the farmhouse's inhabitants are abused. We watch along with the characters, just as helpless as they are. Why do we watch? Do we want to intervene, to play the hero and save the day? Do we perhaps enjoy it? The trouble with many so-called anti-war films, as Loach has said, is that they outwardly condemn the violence while at the same time encouraging (intentionally or not) a vicarious pleasure in the thrill of it all. We want to take part, we imagine how we would behave in such circumstances (of course, we usually imagine ourselves behaving with impeccable bravery and surviving to fight another day). This scene, rather than placing us in the thick of the action, forces us to occupy the position of impotent bystander. Perhaps this is what being a film-goer is all about: powerless voyeurism. As we watch the country tear itself apart in civil war, manipulated by a devious and callous colonial master, this point becomes all the more pertinent. A quietly devastating film.
    8shelliob

    Sad tale

    An exciting piece of Ken Loach drama based on events that sparked the Irish war of independence. Despite being labelled 'anti-British' by critics born 60 years after these events took place, the incidents depicted in this film have in fact all been documented by the British government and are a matter of historical fact. Events such as the treatment of the local population at the brutal hands of the infamous convict drafted Black and tans force have all been recorded assiduously by both sides in the conflict. And the civil war that followed a decision to allow the mostly protestant north to be a part of the new British welfare state. A clash of ideals, deftly handled by Loach, it's a real pity that so many will have their minds made up before they've even seen the film.
    5andyhunt100

    The truth hurts

    Saw it at private screening too.

    Editorial from a Cork newspaper sums it up well:

    This wind shakes more than barley

    In Ireland we are in rare position internationally when it comes to our media. Most of what we read, listen to and watch is usually interpreted in two perspectives, through our own media and through that of our near neighbours across the Irish Sea. There are other instances of large and small neighbours with a common language (Germany and Austria; USA and Canada; Australia and New Zealand), but nowhere is the penetration of the larger nation's media into the neighbouring market as pronounced as it is in Ireland. Viewership of UK TV stations and readership of UK owned newspapers in Ireland is at a level that makes them as significant to our view of the world as our own media. This breeds a familiarity with our neighbours that can make us Irish assume the British know as much about us as we do about them. Nothing could be further from the truth however as has been graphically illustrated by the reception given in Britain to Ken Loach's Palme d'or winning movie The Wind that Shakes the Barley. There is no question that this film makes the British forces look bad, but of course the reality as all Irish people know is that they were. In the UK normally reasonable and intelligent reviewers and commentators cannot cope with this depiction of occupying British forces as violent repressors of a largely defenceless native population. It has been described as unbalanced and portraying the valiant British soldiers in an unfair and unflattering light. The truth is that the vast majority of British citizens couldn't tell you where Galway is and why should they? They're ignorance of their own colonial past so close to home and denial of it shouldn't surprise us; it is not something to be proud of. This is not to attack Britain, but to remind Irish readers of UK newspapers and viewers of UK television that Britain is indeed a foreign country. They view the world through an entirely different perspective than us, and in truth our views are inconsequential to them. That's why Loach's film, which tells essential truths, will not get a general release in the UK. Despite the fact that Anglo-Irish relations are probably better now than they have ever been the truth about Britain's history in Ireland is something that they just aren't ready for, and probably never will be.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Irish actor Liam Cunningham said about the film and its director Ken Loach "It took an Englishman to come over for me to force me in the position to examine my own history."
    • Erros de gravação
      The British troops wear medal ribbons from the Great War (1914-18). The film is set in 1919-21 but ribbons were not issued until 1922 by which time British troops had gone.
    • Citações

      Damien: It's easy to know what you are against, but quite another to know what you are for.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Premonition/The Wind That Shakes the Barley/The Lookout/The Ultimate Gift/Maxed Out (2007)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      The Wind That Shakes the Barley
      Traditional

      Words by Robert Dwyer-Joyce (as Robert Dwyer Joyce)

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes26

    • How long is The Wind that Shakes the Barley?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Why was this film so controversial?
    • Who were the 'Black and Tans'?
    • What was the background to the conflict?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 13 de abril de 2007 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Irlanda
      • Reino Unido
      • Alemanha
      • Itália
      • Espanha
      • França
      • Suíça
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Gaélico irlandês
      • Latim
    • Também conhecido como
      • Vientos de libertad
    • Locações de filme
      • Kilmainham Jail, Dublin, County Dublin, Irlanda(execution)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Sixteen Films
      • Matador Pictures
      • Regent Capital
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 1.836.089
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 135.554
      • 18 de mar. de 2007
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 22.903.165
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 7 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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