Libertarias

Libertarias

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 dates
2 October 1996 (Spain)
Running time
131 minutes
Country Spain
Language Spanish
Budget ESP 700 million[1]
Box office €1.9 million[2]

Libertarias (English: Libertarians) is a Spanish historical drama made in 1996. It was written and directed by Vicente Aranda.

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). 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

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]

See also

References

  1. "Cánovás 73">Cánovás,Miradas Sobre el Cine de Vicente Aranda, p. 73
  2. Majarín, Una Vida de Cine, p. 400
  3. Sandra Brennan, Rovi. Libertarias (1996) New York Times
  4. Libertarias (1995). Movie review from Time Out Film Guide

External links

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