Everything about Ken Loach totally explained
Kenneth Loach (born
17 June 1936), known as
Ken Loach, is an English
television and
film director. He is known for his naturalistic,
social realism directing style and for his
socialist beliefs, which are evident in his film treatment of social issues as
homelessness (for example,
Cathy Come Home) and
labour rights (for example,
Riff-Raff).
Biography
Born in
Nuneaton,
Warwickshire,
England (his father was a factory electrician), Loach attended
King Edward VI Grammar School and following two years in the
RAF read law at
St Peter's College,
Oxford. There he performed in the now well established comedy group, the
Oxford Revue. He started out as an actor in
repertory theatre, but in the early 1960s moved into television direction and was credited in this role on early episodes of
Z-Cars in 1962.
In 1966 Loach made the socially influential docu-drama
Cathy Come Home portraying neglected subjects such as homelessness and unemployment, and presenting a powerful and influential critique of the workings of the Social Services. In the late 1960s he started directing films, and in 1969 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.
During the 1970s and '80s, Loach's films were less successful, often 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 subsequently disliked it so much they attempted to have the negative destroyed. It has never been shown in public.
Loach was later commissioned by
Channel 4 to make
A Question of Leadership, a documentary series on the response of the
British trade union movement to the challenge posed by the policies of the
Thatcher government. However, the programme wasn't broadcast by Channel 4, a decision Loach claimed was politically motivated. Another film, "Which Side Are You On?" (1984) relating to the
UK miners' strike, was commissioned by
The South Bank Show, but also withdrawn before transmission.
However, the 1990s saw Loach return to prominence 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. He directed the Courtroom Drama reconstructions in the Docu-film
McLibel, about the longest trial in English history.
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(External Link
) and has also stood for election to the European Parliament on a
Respect mandate.
Oxford University awarded him an
Honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree in June 2005. He is also an honorary fellow of St Peter's College
(External Link
) In May 2006, he was awarded the
BAFTA Fellowship at the BAFTA TV Awards.
On
28 May 2006, Loach won the
Palme d'Or at the
Cannes Film Festival for his film
The Wind That Shakes the Barley, a movie about the
Irish War of Independence and the subsequent
Irish Civil War during the 1920s. Loach lives with his family in
Bath,
England where he's a supporter of and
shareholder in
Bath City F.C.
Film style
Loach's film work is characterised by a particular view of realism; he strives in every area of filmmaking to emphasise genuine interplay between actors, to the point where some scenes in his films are unscripted. Rather than employing method actors, he prefers unknown talent who have had some of the actual life experience of the characters they portray - so much so that many professional actors aspiring to work with Loach will often pretend to be actual construction labourers or other working class types called for in his script.
(External Link
).
For
Bread and Roses, he chose two leading actors who had experience of union organizing and life as an immigrant. The lead actress in the film,
Pilar Padilla, actually had to learn 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 only some of the actors will know what is going to happen in a scene - the others will often, therefore, be able to express genuine surprise or sadness because they really are affected by 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 that he'd become quite close to during the filming (in fact he'd 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 to him as part payment. There are many other such examples.
Ken Loach is a strong opponent of censorship within cinema and was outraged at the 18 certificate given to
Sweet Sixteen. Loach himself said,
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
Poor Cow (1967)
Kes (1969) (as Kenneth Loach)
The Save the Children Fund Film (1971)
Family Life (1971)
Black Jack (1979)
The Gamekeeper (1980)
Looks and Smiles (1981) (as Kenneth Loach)
Which Side Are You On? (1984)
Fatherland (1986)
Hidden Agenda (1990). Cannes Special Jury Prize.
Riff-Raff (1990).
Raining Stones (1993). Cannes Special Jury Prize.
Ladybird, Ladybird (1994)
Land and Freedom (1995). FIPRESCI International Critics Prize and the Cannes Ecumenical Jury Prize.
A Contemporary Case for Common Ownership (1995)
Carla's Song (1996)
The Flickering Flame (1997)
My Name Is Joe (1998)
Bread and Roses (2000)
The Navigators (2001)
Sweet Sixteen (2002)
11'9"01 September 11 (segment "United Kingdom") (2002)
Ae Fond Kiss... (2004)
Tickets (2005), along with Ermanno Olmi and Abbas Kiarostami
The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006) Palme d'Or, Cannes
It's a Free World... (2007) Screenplay Osella at 64th Venice Film FestivalFurther Information
Get more info on 'Ken Loach'.
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