Documentaire montrant la lutte du gouvernement républicain espagnol contre une rébellion des forces d'extrême droite dirigée par le général Francisco Franco et soutenue par l'Allemagne nazie... Tout lireDocumentaire montrant la lutte du gouvernement républicain espagnol contre une rébellion des forces d'extrême droite dirigée par le général Francisco Franco et soutenue par l'Allemagne nazie et l'Italie fasciste.Documentaire montrant la lutte du gouvernement républicain espagnol contre une rébellion des forces d'extrême droite dirigée par le général Francisco Franco et soutenue par l'Allemagne nazie et l'Italie fasciste.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Self - Republican Leader
- (as La Pasionaria)
- Narrator (English version)
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
- Narrator (French version)
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
- …
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*** (out of 4)
Nice documentary from Joris Ivens about the struggles of the Spanish Republic who were trying to save their lives against forces led by Gen. Franco who was being backed by Nazi Germany. Ernest Hemingway narrates this documentary, which lasts just over 53-minutes. At that short of a running time you know not every aspect of this legendary battle is going to be talked about so if you're needing a history lesson then this here probably isn't going to be for you. We really don't learn too much about how this battle got started and of course there's no conclusion but THE Spanish EARTH remains rather interesting simply because of the images and the heart behind the storytelling. There's no question that the production company and director Ivens wanted to stand up against those they felt were doing evil things against human beings only wanting to put food on the table for their children. There are many striking visuals where we see people waiting in line for food, which of course runs out before everyone could be fed. We get images of the young men going off to war to fight and of course with war comes the images of many who lost their lives. The production is rather crude as the cinematography isn't all that impressive and there are many issues with the sound but this really doesn't take away from the film and in many ways it makes it even more raw. What I was most impressed with where the images that really put us in the middle of this battle and one of the most striking happens at a bread line where we see that even bread has been stamped so that the poor knows who it belongs to. Film buffs will notice that Orson Welles gets credited for "narration" but his vocals were dropped and replaced by Hemingway.
This, however, isn't a documentary as much as it is straight Soviet-style propaganda. The style of the film, from the poor farmers bettering themselves with a homemade concrete irrigation system to the election of soldiers to hear impassioned political pep talks from movement leaders, s straight from the Stalnist manual of Lifestyles of the Glorious Peoples. This isn't meant to Red-bait any of the participants -- they truly believed in a "free" Spain, and fascist-backed Francisco Franco's regime wasn't the answer, either -- but the reality was far different and is only now coming to light after 70 years.
The Spanish Civil War was also very much a fascist/Soviet proxy war, and the Soviet Union had a not-so-hidden hand in its direction. Look carefully at the fighting sequences, and you'll see very atypical people in different-style uniforms guiding artillery and directing troops.
As a historical insight -- despite what now appears to be a ham-fisted approach in propaganda -- the film is priceless. And many thanks for TCM and its ever-expanding programming efforts in broadcasting the film in July 2007; hopefully, we'll always have somebody unwilling to slice, dice and crop something and still call it a classic, ala AMC.
Hemingway makes for a weak narrator and the editing and sound is pedestrian obfuscating the flow much of the time but the spirit and determination of this idealistic stand by a group branded as pre-mature anti-Fascists comes thru loud and clear.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOrson Welles recorded the commentary written by Ernest Hemingway and receives on-screen credit, but Hemingway decided to use his own voice instead. It is not clear which version of the film uses Hemingway's voice; the most common print does use the more cultured voice of Welles, which seemed jarring to members of the Contemporary Historians production company--formed by Herman Shumlin, Lillian Hellman and Dorothy Parker, which produced the movie. Both versions are available.
- Citations
Orson Welles, Narrator: Why do they stay? They stay because this is their city. These are their homes. Here is their work. This is their fight. The fight to be allowed to live as human beings.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Des Suisses dans la guerre d'Espagne (1974)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Terre d'Espagne
- Lieux de tournage
- Fuentidueña de Tajo, Madrid, Espagne(Main location for the irrigation project.)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée52 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1