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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'the Bernie Sanders of social-realistic cinema.'
Celebrity focus: Loachs I, Daniel Blake emerges as a timely rallying cry
SATURDAY, DEC. 24, 2016
British director Ken Loach has for 50 years been making lauded dramas rich in social realism that give dignity to the dispossessed. But his I, Daniel Blake, which won the Cannes Film Festivals Palme dOr, has powerfully struck a nerve, tapping into the same working-class frustrations that are upending politics in Europe and the U.S.
The film, which opens in limited release in North America on Friday, has emerged as a kind of rallying cry, part film and part movement. Its about a man a cheery, blue-collar bloke (Dave Johns) who, after a heart attack, is told by his doctor hes too sick to work. But his application for government assistance is rejected, leading him down a path both tender and tragic.
In Britain, I, Daniel Blake has been the biggest box-office hit of the 80-year-old directors career. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn urged Prime Minster Theresa May to see the film . Screenings were organized across the country to urge reforms to Britains benefits system, which has come under fire for sanctions that critics say keep support services from the needy. The films tale, simply and straightforwardly told, rang true for many . Its title was even beamed onto the walls of Parliament.
For Loach, the groundswell around I, Daniel Blake points to the widespread rage felt by working class people on both sides of the Atlantic, liberal and conservative.
[font size="3"]There is a great sense of: Were being cheated. People dont know exactly how theyre being cheated but they know theres something wrong, Loach said in an interview by phone from London. It relates to the Trump victory. It relates to (the U.K.s) vote to leave Europe. It relates to the rise of the far right in Europe.[/font]
Politics have long gone hand-in-hand with Loach, 80, a proud socialist who has been called the Bernie Sanders of social-realistic cinema. In many ways little has changed for the director, whose working-class portraits like Kes, Cathy Come Home and The Wind That Shakes the Barley are considered among the greatest British films.
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In a sense, its less that Loach has made a film that suits the times, and more that the sociopolitical issues hes long documented and decried about have come to the surface.
[font size="3"]This isnt an accident. This is the consequence, he said of the U.S. election. Its the consequence of 40, 50 years of neo-liberalism that began with Reagan and Thatcher and the economists they looked up to and the prioritization of the interests of big capital, the big multi-national corporations. Industries were closed down. The work was sent to where the workforce was more vulnerable. Taxes have been lifted for the wealthier people and corporations. This produced not only mass unemployment but mass alienation.[/font]
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2016/dec/24/loachs-i-daniel-blake-emerges-as-a-timely-rallying/