Ken Loach

From Free net encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 15:14, 14 April 2006
Pankkake (Talk | contribs)
/* Cinema */ [[Sweet Sixteen (movie)|Sweet Sixteen]]
Next diff →

Current revision

Ken Loach (born June 17, 1936) is a British television and film director, known for his social realist style and socialist themes.

Contents

Biography

Image:Cathycomehome.JPG

Born Kenneth Loach in Nuneaton, England, he studied law at St Peter's College, Oxford. He started out as an actor in repertory theatre, but in the early 1960s moved into producing television docu-dramas, notably the socially influential Cathy Come Home (1966). In the late 1960s he moved into directing films, and made Kes, the story of a troubled boy and his kestrel, based on the novel A Kestrel for a Knave by Barry Hines. It remains perhaps his best known film in Britain.

The 1970s and 80s were less successful, with his films suffering from poor distribution, lack of interest and political censorship. His film The Save the Children Fund Film (1971) was commissioned by the charity, who disliked it so much they attempted to have the negative destroyed. It has yet to be shown in public. He was also commissioned by Channel 4 to make A Question of Leadership, a documentary on the UK miners' strike. However, the program was withheld by Channel 4 for political reasons.

However, the 1990s saw Loach return to form, with the production of a series of critically acclaimed and popular films. During this period he was also three times awarded prizes at the Cannes Film Festival.

In December 2003, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Birmingham.

In November 2004, he was elected to the national council of the Respect coalition.

Film style

Loach is characterized by a particular view of what realism is. He likes in every area of film making to emphasize what he sees as genuine. He prefers unknown actors who have some of the life experience their characters are supposed to have had, to famous method actors. So for Bread and Roses he chose two leading actors who had experience of union organizing and life as an immigrant. To such an extent that the lead actress only learned English in order to play the part.

He tries to make sure that actors express as genuinely as possible the feelings of their characters by filming the story in order, and crucially, not giving the actors the script until a few minutes before the filming. Frequently in a scene, only some of the actors will know what is going to happen - the others will often be able to express genuine surprise shock or sadness because they really are hit with the events of the scene.

Two examples: in Kes the boy actor, discovering the dead bird at the end, believed that the director had actually killed the bird he had become quite close to during the filming (in fact he had used a dead bird found elsewhere). In Raining Stones one of the actresses visited at her house by a loan shark had no idea that he was going to force her to take off her wedding ring and give it him as part payment. There are many other examples.

Filmography

Television

  • Z Cars (series, 1962)
  • Diary of a Young Man (1964)
  • 3 Clear Sundays (1965)
  • Up the Junction (1965)
  • The End of Arthur's Marriage (1965)
  • Coming Out Party (1965)
  • Cathy Come Home (1966) (as Kenneth Loach)
  • In Two Minds (1967)
  • The Golden Vision (1968)
  • The Big Flame (1969)
  • The Rank and the File (1971) - part of the Play for Today series.
  • After a Lifetime (1971)
  • A Misfortune (1973)
  • Days of Hope (mini-series, 1975)
  • The Price of Coal (1977)
  • Auditions (1980)
  • A Question of Leadership (1981)
  • The Red and the Blue: Impressions of Two Political Conferences - Autumn 1982 (1983)
  • Questions of Leadership (1983)
  • The View From the Woodpile (1989)

Cinema

External links

de:Ken Loach eo:Ken LOACH fr:Ken Loach it:Ken Loach nl:Ken Loach ja:ケン・ローチ pt:Ken Loach sv:Ken Loach tr:Ken Loach