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The Wind That Shakes the Barley

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Ireland, United Kingdom, Germany · 2006
2h 7m
Director Ken Loach
Starring Cillian Murphy, Pádraic Delaney, Liam Cunningham, Orla Fitzgerald
Genre Drama, War

An Irish medical student abandons his training to join the Republican Army after witnessing brutality committed by the Royal Irish Constabulary. Soon, he finds he is at odds with his brother as they engage in guerrilla warfare against British forces in this gripping and violent historical drama.

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What are critics saying?

80

Village Voice by

Like Jean-Pierre Melville's recently rediscovered "Army of Shadows," The Wind That Shakes the Barley possesses the soul of an anti-war movie and the style of a thriller.

90

The New York Times by A.O. Scott

The history presented in The Wind That Shakes the Barley hardly feels like a closed book or a museum display. It is as alive and as troubling as anything on the evening news, though far more thoughtful and beautiful.

90

The New Yorker by David Denby

A sombrely beautiful dream of the violent Irish past. Refusing the standard flourishes of Irish wildness or lyricism, Loach has made a film for our moment, a time of bewildering internecine warfare.

60

Variety by Derek Elley

Though tastily lensed and with a convincing cast led by Cillian Murphy, essentially small-scale picture lacks the involving sweep of Loach's earlier historical-political yarn, "Land and Freedom."

88

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

Beautifully shot, both in darkened homes and on the misty green Irish landscape by Loach's frequent cinematographer Barry Aykroyd, "Wind" has a you-are-there intensity and intimacy about it that make it nearly overwhelming. But for all its violence and subsequent sadness, it's a movie of extraordinary importance.

75

The A.V. Club by Noel Murray

There's a kind of dry tastefulness about The Wind That Shakes The Barley's historical recreations, even when Loach is staging rapes and executions.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Ray Bennett

Atmospheric but pedestrian, it is a retelling of the classic tragedy of all civil wars, from the U.S. to Vietnam to England, where brother is pitched against brother.

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