Libertarias
Libertarias (English: Libertarians) is a Spanish historical drama made in 1996. It was written and directed by Vicente Aranda.
Libertarias | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Libertarias | |
Directed by | Vicente Aranda |
Produced by | Andrés Vicente Gómez |
Screenplay by | Vicente Aranda Antonio Rabinad |
Starring | Ana Belén, Victoria Abril, Ariadna Gil Blanca Apilánez |
Music by | José Nieto |
Cinematography | José Luis Alcaine |
Edited by | Teresa Font |
Production company | Sdad Sogetel Lola Films Academy Pictures Era Films |
Distributed by | Sogepaq Distribution S.A |
Release date | 2 October 1996 (Spain) |
Running time | 117 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish |
Budget | ESP 700 million[1] |
Box office | €1.9 million[2] |
In 1936, Maria (Ariadna Gil), a young nun is recruited by Pilar (Ana Belén), a militant feminist, into an anarchist militia following the onset of the Spanish Civil War. Guided by the older woman, Maria is exposed to the realities of war and revolution, and comes to question her former, sheltered life.
Plot summary
The movie is set in 1936 in Barcelona in the midst of the Spanish Revolution and Spanish Civil War.[3] Militia women Pilar (Ana Belen) and Floren (Victoria Abril) are joined by former prostitute Charo (Loles Leon) and former nun Maria (Ariadna Gil), who had hidden in a brothel to escape revolutionary violence against clergy. The film opens with scenes of working class militants demolishing and burning religious icons, as they shout "down with Capitalism!" and "long live the libertarian revolution!"
While fully immersed in the overall enthusiasm of revolutionary Spain, Pilar and friends find themselves fighting against deep gender inequality which complicates their efforts in the war against Francisco Franco's Nationalist/Fascist/Catholic forces. They encounter resistance even within their own "Free Women" (Mujeres Libres) organization as one woman (that resembles Federica Montseny) tries to persuade them to stay and work in defense factories, while men try to convince them to go work as cooks, not front-line soldiers.
Cast and characters
- María (Ariadna Gil) is a young, sheltered woman, Maria is swept into the confusion and euphoria of the initial days of the Spanish Civil War, when her convent is overrun by anarchist militiamen. Fearing for her life, as she believes the men mean her harm, she seeks refuge amongst the back alleys of the city, only to be given shelter in a brothel. Minutes later, the same building is stormed by militia-women, and the stern faced Pilar. When the brothel is closed, Maria is left with nowhere to go. Fearing for her safety, she stays by Pilar's side, hoping the stronger woman can shield her from the realities of a war, and a social revolution, she does not understand. Overtime she comes to sympathize with the anarchists who she has joined, blending her own beliefs of heaven and paradise with an anarchist desire for a communal society founded on liberation. Though she never picks up a rifle for their cause, she ultimately becomes strong enough for a final reversal of roles, as she gives shelter to Pilar in the final moments of the movie.
- Pilar (Ana Belén) is a confident anarcha-feminist, Mujeres Libres member, and militia soldier, Pilar is a constant source of strength for the characters around her, and a protector of the naive María. After convincing the prostitutes of a brothel to turn their backs on their old lives and become militia soldiers, she takes Maria under her wing, fearing the shy girl will only be in danger as a Catholic in a newly anti-theistic anarchist society. Disguising the girl as a fellow anarchist, she takes Maria as a ward and leads a small troop of militia soldiers into battle against the forces of Franco.
- Victoria Abril as Floren
- Blanca Apilánez as Aura
- Laura Mañá as Concha
- Loles León as Charo
- Jorge Sanz as Obrero Hijo
- José Sancho as Obrero padre
- Joan Crosas as Boina
- Antonio Dechent as Faneca
Reception
Time Out stated that the movie "deserves praise for its feminist perspective on the course of the 1936-7 revolution, when women's liberation was a logical, if hardly well-recognised, constituent of the libertarian ideals that the Spanish working class rose up to assert."[4]
References
- "Cánovás 73">Cánovás,Miradas Sobre el Cine de Vicente Aranda, p. 73
- Majarín, Una Vida de Cine, p. 400
- Sandra Brennan, Rovi. Libertarias (1996) New York Times
- Libertarias (1995). Movie review from Time Out Film Guide
External links
- Libertarias at IMDb
- Libertarias at AllMovie
- (in English) New Internationalist article
- (in English and Spanish) Universidad del Sagrado Corazón summary
- (in English) Locarno International Film Festival synopsis