Kes (#561) USED
Named by the British Film Institute as one of the ten best British films of the century, Kes, from Ken Loach (Hidden Agenda, The Wind That Shakes the Barley), is cinemaâs quintessential portrait of working-class Northern England. Billy (an astonishingly naturalistic David Bradley) is a fifteen-year-old minerâs son whose close bond with a wild kestrel provides him with a spiritual escape from his dead-end life. Kes established the sociopolitical engagement and artistic brilliance of its filmmaker, and pushed the British âangry young manâ film of the sixties into a new realm of authenticity, using real locations and nonprofessional actors. Loachâs poignant coming-of-age drama remains its now legendary directorâs most beloved and influential film.
Named by the British Film Institute as one of the ten best British films of the century, Kes, from Ken Loach (Hidden Agenda, The Wind That Shakes the Barley), is cinemaâs quintessential portrait of working-class Northern England. Billy (an astonishingly naturalistic David Bradley) is a fifteen-year-old minerâs son whose close bond with a wild kestrel provides him with a spiritual escape from his dead-end life. Kes established the sociopolitical engagement and artistic brilliance of its filmmaker, and pushed the British âangry young manâ film of the sixties into a new realm of authenticity, using real locations and nonprofessional actors. Loachâs poignant coming-of-age drama remains its now legendary directorâs most beloved and influential film.
Description
Named by the British Film Institute as one of the ten best British films of the century, Kes, from Ken Loach (Hidden Agenda, The Wind That Shakes the Barley), is cinemaâs quintessential portrait of working-class Northern England. Billy (an astonishingly naturalistic David Bradley) is a fifteen-year-old minerâs son whose close bond with a wild kestrel provides him with a spiritual escape from his dead-end life. Kes established the sociopolitical engagement and artistic brilliance of its filmmaker, and pushed the British âangry young manâ film of the sixties into a new realm of authenticity, using real locations and nonprofessional actors. Loachâs poignant coming-of-age drama remains its now legendary directorâs most beloved and influential film.