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El viento que agita la cebada

7.3·2006·127 min·English·Dirigida por Ken Loach
DramaBélica
Sinopsis

Irlanda, 1920. Dos hermanos se alistan en la guerrilla para combatir contra las tropas británicas que intentan impedir la independencia de Irlanda. El amor por su país hace que Damien abandone su prometedora carrera de médico y se una a su hermano Teddy en la lucha por la libertad. Tras sufrir varias derrotas y un escalofriante número de bajas, el Gobierno Británico decide pactar con los rebeldes para poner fin al sangriento enfrentamiento. Pero el acuerdo alcanzado provoca divisiones entre los irlandeses y desemboca en un nuevo y fraticida conflicto armado.

Reparto principal
Cillian Murphy

Cillian Murphy

Damien

Pádraic Delaney

Pádraic Delaney

Teddy

Liam Cunningham

Liam Cunningham

Dan

Orla Fitzgerald

Orla Fitzgerald

Sinead

Mary O'Riordan

Peggy

Communauté
7.4
Note Trakt
1.2K votes
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4.5KListes

Avis de la communauté (5)

D
decatur555VIPCritique
Dec 7, 2025

There’s something raw and emotional in The Wind That Shakes the Barley that ends up settling inside you. Ken Loach recreates Ireland’s struggle for independence with a sense of realism that feels almost documentary-like, and the film avoids heroic poses or artificial romanticism. The story has the courage to show the price of rebellion, the doubts, and the bitterness that arise when ideology collides with daily life. What struck me the most is how Loach builds conflict from something intimate and painful. Brothers, neighbors, friends… all trapped between loyalty to their homeland and loyalty to one another. Cillian Murphy gives a performance that is calm on the surface but deeply intense underneath, and it works beautifully with Loach’s minimal, natural direction. Every scene feels lived-in rather than staged, and the land itself becomes part of the emotional atmosphere. The pacing is slow but intentional, which I appreciate. Instead of pushing dramatic peaks, the film settles into quiet conversations, fear, exhaustion, and the exhaustion of a war where no one truly wins. Loach does not ask the viewer for blind patriotism; he asks for empathy. He invites us into rooms where men debate ideology like ordinary people debating how to survive. It’s true that Loach sometimes leans toward moral clarity, and the political position is unmistakable, but I never felt manipulated. The tension between idealism and pragmatism is clearly expressed, and the film holds emotional power even when you think you know where it’s going. The final stretch is heartbreaking, and it lingers. Without needing visual excess or grandiose speeches, The Wind That Shakes the Barley is powerful because it trusts silence, pain, and memory. I finished it shaken, more for its humanity than its violence.

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I
Iam_iDrxpzzz
2/10Mar 20, 2026

lowkey one of the worst movies i have seen

S
Spiritualized Kaos
8/10Oct 14, 2025

The treaty that was signed was rubbish.

P
peritas
7/10Aug 9, 2024

Excellent storytelling, shows the complexity of the situation at those difficult times.

C
Copeland1994VIP
7/10Aug 6, 2024

Somehow, I had never known about this movie. It was nice to go back and see an early career Cillian Murphy in a leading role (that isn't 28 Days Later), which just showcases how great he has always been. The old timey feel is not particularly my cup of tea, but this undeniably a solid war drama. Rating: 3/5 - 75% - Worth Watching

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