In 1984, during the strike of the miners
against the Thatcher administration, Ken
Loach and the director of photography
Chris Menges traveled around Great
Britain by van and, with their shouldersupported
camera, in four days they filmed
the protests of the miners and their
families, their songs, their poems. It was
censored by the TV that had produced it,
but was aired nonetheless six months
later by Channel Four.
Biography
film director
Ken Loach
Ken Loach (Nuneaton, UK, 1936), after directing various theatrical performances while studying at Oxford, moved on to directing for TV in 1961, also working for BBC. In 1967, he directed his first movie, Poor Cow. An exponent of Britain’s free cinema and winner of the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at Venice in 1994, he has received numerous awards, including the FIPRESCI award in Cannes for Riff-Raff and Land and Freedom, and the Golden Palm for The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006). The Angels’ Share received the jury prize at the last Cannes Film Festival.
FILMOGRAFIA
Poor Cow (1967), Kes (1969), Hidden Agenda (L’agenda nascosta, 1990), Riff-Raff (Riff Raff - Meglio perderli che trovarli, 1991), Raining Stones (Piovono pietre, 1993), Ladybird Ladybird (id., 1994), Land and Freedom (Terra e libertà, 1995), Carla’s Song (La canzone di Carla, 1996), Bread and Roses (id., 2000), Sweet Sixteen (id., 2001), Ae Fond Kiss (Un bacio appassionato, 2004), The Wind That Shakes the Barley (Il vento che accarezza l’erba, 2006), It’s a Free World (In questo mondo libero, 2007), Looking for Eric (Il mio amico Eric, 2009), The Angels’ Share (La parte degli angeli, 2012).
Cast
& Credits
fotografia/cinematography Chris Menges, Ken Morse, James Dibling
montaggio/film editing Jonathan Morris
suono/sound Judy Freeman, Terry Hardy
produzione/production LWT