Ernest Hemingway: The Spanish Earth (1937)

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • This documentary film uses footage of war and glimpses of rural Spanish life in its portrayal of the struggle of the Spanish Republican government against a rebellion by right-wing forces led by General Francisco Franco and backed by Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. The film was written by Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos (among others) and was narrated by Hemingway.
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Komentáře • 260

  • @luismena1859
    @luismena1859 Před 9 lety +47

    Thank you very much for uploading this document. Watching it has been very emotive for me. I've grown hearing tales of the lost war from my grandfather,who have had a harsh but happy life and of whom I am proud.

  • @thetriumphofthethrill2457
    @thetriumphofthethrill2457 Před 4 lety +21

    The importance of the film outweighs the flaws and much credit to Hemingway, Ivens and all involved in creating this time travel to the country during one of its most fascinating and darkest times.

    • @trevorplows7494
      @trevorplows7494 Před 2 lety +1

      Hemingway was a self important woman bashing communist coward. So was FdR and Truman for in Truman's case only until Korea. When Papa was acting a Bigshot and shooting up toilets in a hotel , what a hero he was just a jackass. What do you think there was no Nationalist peasant supporters. Get real for once , in the last 70 years the likes of Putin , Stalin , Kruschev etc were anti American and democracy enemies. . Churchill the only Western leader with guts and intelligence said take them out why we have the muscle, 7 years later MacCarther but no Democrat president , and look what this has gotten us. On the brink

  • @MultiRed01
    @MultiRed01 Před 4 lety +19

    This Spanish earth
    is dry and hard.
    And the faces of the men who work that
    earth are hard and dry from the sun.
    This worthless land
    with water will yield much.
    For fifty years we wanted to irrigate
    but they held us back.
    Now we will bring water to it to raise
    food for the defenders of Madrid.
    The village of Fuentedue?a,
    where fifteen hundred people live
    and work the land
    for the common good.
    It is good bread
    stamped with the Union label.
    But there is only
    enough for the village.
    Irrigating the waste land
    of the village
    can give ten times
    as much grain for bread,
    as well as potatoes,
    wine and onions for Madrid.
    The village is on the Tajo river
    and the main highroad that is the life
    line between Valencia and Madrid.
    All food for Madrid
    comes on this road.
    To win the war the rebel troops
    must cut this road.
    They plan the irrigation
    of the dry fields.
    They go to trace the ditch.
    This is the true face of men
    going into action.
    It is a little different from any
    other face that you will ever see.
    Men cannot act before the camera
    in the presence of death.
    The villagers in Fuentedue?a
    hear this noise and say...
    "our guns".
    The frontline curves north
    to Madrid.
    These were the doors of houses
    that are empty now.
    Those who survived the bombardment
    bring them to reinforce the new trenches.
    When you are fighting
    to defend your country,
    war, as it lasts,
    becomes an almost-normal life.
    You eat, and drink, and sleep,
    and read the papers.
    The loudspeaker of the People's Army.
    It has a range of two kilometers.
    When these men started for the lines
    three months ago,
    many of them held a rifle
    for the first time.
    Some did not even know
    how to reload.
    Now they are instructing
    the new recruits how to take down
    and reassemble a rifle.
    This is the salient
    driven into Madrid itself when
    the enemy took the University City.
    After repeated counter-attacks
    they are still in the "Casa de Vel?zquez",
    the palace on the left
    with the pointed towers,
    and in the ruined Clinical Hospital.
    The bearded man is
    Commander Mart?nez de Arag?n.
    Before the war
    he was a lawyer.
    He was a brave
    and skillful commander,
    and he died in the attack
    on the "Casa del Campo"
    on the day we filmed
    the battle there.
    The rebels try
    to relieve the Clinic.
    Juli?n, a boy from the village,
    writes home:
    "Papa, I will be there in three days.
    Tell our mother".
    The troops are called together.
    The company is assembled to elect
    representatives to attend the big meeting
    for celebrating the union
    of all the militia regiments
    into the new brigades
    of the People's Army.
    Enrique "Lister",
    a stonemason from Galicia.
    In six months of fighting he rose from a
    simple soldier to the command of a division.
    He's one of the most brilliant
    young soldiers of the Republican Army.
    Carlos,
    one of the first commanders
    of the Fifth Regiment.
    He talks of the Army of the People.
    How they are fighting
    for Spanish democracy
    and for the Government
    they themselves have chosen.
    Fighting together we shall win
    a new strong Spain.
    Jos? D?az,
    he used to work twelve hours
    a day as a typesetter
    before he became a member
    of the Spanish Parliament.
    Gustav Regler,
    one of the fine
    writers of Germany,
    who came to Spain
    to fight for his ideals.
    He was gravely wounded
    in June.
    Regler praises the unity
    of the People's Army.
    The defense of Madrid
    will remind men always
    of their loyalty and courage.
    The most famous woman in Spain
    today is speaking.
    They call her "La Pasionaria".
    She is not a romantic beauty,
    nor any Carmen.
    She's the wife
    of a poor miner of Asturias.
    But all the character of the
    new Spanish woman is in the voice.
    "Comrades of the 12th Flag,"
    "Jos? Leiva speaking. Do you know me?
    I'm among my brothers of The People's Army..."
    "...where I've been given an excellent treatment".
    "Here you can't see the beastly
    treatment we are given in those lines".
    Living in the cellars of that ruined
    building are the enemy.
    They are Moors and Civil Guards.
    They are brave troops or they would not have
    held out after their position is hopeless.
    But they are professional soldiers
    fighting against the people in arms,
    trying to impose the will of the military
    on the will of the people,
    and the people hate them,
    for without their tenacity and the
    constant aid of Italy and Germany,
    the Spanish revolt would have ended
    six weeks after it began.
    This battalion goes on leave,
    and Juli?n, who is with them,
    has three days leave to the village.
    The Duke of Alba's Palace
    is destroyed by rebel bombardment.
    Treasures of Spanish art are carefully
    salvaged by government militiamen.
    Madrid, by its position,
    is a natural fortress,
    and each day the people
    make its defences more impregnable.
    You stand in line all day
    to buy food for supper.
    Sometimes the food runs out
    before you reach the door.
    Sometimes a shell falls
    near the line
    and at home they wait and wait,
    and no one brings back
    anything for supper.
    Unable to enter the town,
    the enemy try to destroy it.
    This is a man who had
    nothing to do with war.
    A book-keeper on his way to his office
    at eight o'clock in the morning.
    So now they take
    the book-keeper away.
    But not to his office
    or to his home.
    The Government urges all civilians
    to evacuate Madrid.
    But "where will we go?"
    "Where can we live?"
    "What can we do for a living?"
    "I won't go. I'm too old".
    But we must keep the children
    off the street,
    except when there is need
    to stand in line.
    Recruiting is speeded up
    by the bombardment.
    Every useless killing
    angers the people.
    Men from all businesses,
    professions and trades
    enlist in the Republican Army.
    Meanwhile, in Valencia,
    the President...
    Juli?n catches a ride on an empty truck
    and comes home sooner than he expected.
    Juli?n drills the village boys in the evening,
    when they come back from the fields.
    In Madrid, a future shock battalion
    of bullfighters,
    football players and athletes
    is drilling.
    They say the old goodbyes
    that sound the same in any language.
    She says she'll wait.
    He says that he'll come back.
    He knows she'll wait. Who knows
    for what the way the shelling is.
    Nobody knows if he comes back.
    "Take care of the kid", he says.
    "I will", she says and knows she can't.
    They both know that
    when they move you out in trucks,
    it's to a battle.
    Death comes each morning
    to these people of the town,
    sent from the hills
    two miles away.
    The smell of death is acrid
    high-explosive smoke and blasted granite.
    Why do they stay?
    They stay because this is their city.
    These are their homes. Here is
    their work. This is their fight.
    The fight to be allowed
    to live as human beings.
    Boys look for bits of shell fragment
    as they once gathered hill stones.
    So the next shell finds them.
    The German artillery has increased
    their allowance for battery today.
    Before, death came
    when you were old or sick,
    but now it comes to all this village.
    High in the sky
    and shining silver
    it comes to all who have
    no place to run, no place to hide.
    Three "Junkers" planes did this.
    The Government pursuit-planes
    shot one "Junkers" down.
    I can't read German either.
    These dead came
    from another country.
    They signed to work in Ethiopia,
    the prisoners said.
    We took no statements from the dead but
    all the letters we read were very sad.
    The Italians lost more killed,
    wounded and missing
    in this single battle of Brihuega
    than in all the Ethiopian war.
    The rebels attack
    the Madrid-Valencia road again.
    They've crossed the Jarama river
    and try to take the Arganda bridge.
    Troops are rushed from the North
    to the counter-attack.
    The village works
    to bring the water.
    They arrive at the Valencia road.
    The infantry in the assault,
    where cameras need much luck to go.
    The slow, heavy-laden,
    undramatic movement forward.
    The men in echelon,
    in columns of six.
    In the ultimate loneliness
    of what is known as contact,
    where each man knows there is only
    himself and five other men,
    and before them
    all the great unknown.
    This is the moment that
    all the rest of war prepares for,
    when six men go forward into death
    to walk across a stretch of land
    and by their presence on it prove
    "THIS EARTH IS OURS".
    The counter-attack
    has been successful.
    The road is free.
    Six men were five.
    Then four were three.
    But these three stayed, dug in
    and held the ground,
    along with all the other fours
    and threes and twos
    that started out as sixes.
    The bridge is ours,...
    the road is saved.
    The men who never fought before,
    who were not trained in arms,
    who only wanted work and food,
    fight on...
    Subtitles by:
    OZY (2006)

  • @VicLabs
    @VicLabs Před 5 lety +11

    Having just finished Hugh Thomas thousand page history of the Spanish civil war, this film is a great glimpse into the republican mindset. What a misunderstood and misrepresented war!

  • @BrettHeth
    @BrettHeth Před 5 lety +4

    What I notice from this film is how other-worldly this country was backen then.
    The buildings are vaguely recognisable but the men ride donkeys like timeless, rural Africans and the women sweep dirt streets with bent backs because their brooms do not even have such a thing as a simple long handle.
    Their faces generally show hardship - something that has retuned herwith the “crisis,” while skinny dogs scuttle around.
    Later, we see teams of men working in the country wide hand-held hoes and when a man speaks on the telephone it is surprising because the mental atmosphere of the film could have been almost medieval.
    The war scenes reinforce how empty war always is. The attempts to glorify it with stirring music are hollow only partly because we know that the end result is a stifling dictatorship, four decades long.
    In Madrid, ragged children play in the street and in the next frame a man hurredly carries a seemingly emptycoffin over one shoulder. Food cues (for some people this is a reality again today) crowd next to destroyed buildings and a single corpse lying in the gutter. (We are told the body is that of a book-keeper on his way to work at eight in the morning.)
    After more battle scenes and shots of noble-peasant types the film, now clearly a piece of prop, ends with a man's voice singing a very moving a capella song, ruined somewhat by Hemmingway's voice-over.

  • @maybe_monad
    @maybe_monad Před 12 lety +10

    I've finished reading 'For whom the bell tolls' yesterday, saw this film on a wiki page and by a coincidence found it in my youtube feed. thank you the internet!)
    ---
    It's really interesting that this film has rather different atmosphere, comparing it to the book.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Před 3 lety +2

      I just read it too [4/25/21]. I really couldnt put it down, despite a few romance passages where I found the dialogue between Robert Jordan and Maria a bit much, its overall a very fine book.

  • @JustVinnyMusic
    @JustVinnyMusic Před 5 lety +5

    The true story of Orson Welles and Hemingway you can get a glimpse of here - czcams.com/video/NyTi9v9QPxE/video.html. Orson was supposed to narrate this but Hemingway did not like what he was doing and parted ways on the film at first meeting. But they did subsequently have a friendship. But the story is hilarious, also an insight into Hemingway's personality that is little spoken about.

  • @swanash3776
    @swanash3776 Před 3 lety

    thank you for uploading this docu. been looking for it since forever!

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Před 3 lety

      Spain is a beautiful country, not as materialistic as much of Europe. I was in Seville, in a small out of the way bar tucked away somewhere and I was thinking about Hemingway's stories of Spain and I looked up from my cervesa and there was his portrait on the wall -he had been photographed having a drink there in the bar.

  • @flieflodderke
    @flieflodderke Před 10 lety +15

    The film was made by Joris Ivens!

  • @sewagedump
    @sewagedump Před 2 lety +2

    Finally. I only ever heard Orson Welles' narration for it.

  • @lorenzogranada2
    @lorenzogranada2 Před 11 lety +14

    The "scenes of rural life" are authentic in essence - I lived in Andalucia in 1960-62 and life hadn't changed much - but the incredible sequence of the women sweeping their village street was obviously staged by the photographer (go to 2.50 seconds in the film). The woman in the background was clearly instructed to sweep her way across the street in unison with the one in the foreground, the first like a miniature of the second, to accentuate the monotony and misery of the villages.

    • @888ssss
      @888ssss Před rokem +1

      i live in andalusia. its still the same although the brushes are plastic now. sometimes if i see a neighbour sweeping i go out and sweep with them, and at the end we all say viva franco. then we kick a donkey.

    • @montyyeger3910
      @montyyeger3910 Před rokem

      😅

  • @guillermocafe7616
    @guillermocafe7616 Před 7 lety +6

    I think it was Martha Gellhorn who correctly observed that the Spanish Civil War was a "dress rehearsal" for what later became known as WWII. This documentary film is also referenced, with a few outtakes involving wrangling over scripting, narration and editing between Hemingway, Welles and Dos Passos in the 2012 movie "Hemingway & Gellhorn." (Which might have well been titled "Hemingway vs. Gellhorn").

    • @joselo-zl5wo
      @joselo-zl5wo Před 3 lety

      Where are you from?....

    • @guycarrwuzright7189
      @guycarrwuzright7189 Před 3 lety

      Love that movie. As well as Hemingway’s books and I read one of Gellhorn’s too. She was an amazing writer.

    • @feliscorax
      @feliscorax Před 2 lety

      @@guycarrwuzright7189 They both were, but I honestly thought the film was a bit of a hatchet job against Hemingway and a hagiography towards Gellhorn. For me, they were equals in every respect, including in terms of the deficits of their own personalities, which is probably why their relationship was so combustible: they were the same soul in two bodies, so to speak. Her interview with John Pilger, which is available on CZcams and elsewhere online, is a fascinating study.

  • @anambhujamukherjee9758

    Such an authentic documentary. Need to submit an assignment by tonight on Spanish Earth. Watched it but still I have no clue about what to write!

  • @relathan1
    @relathan1 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for this. It's so much better than the old copy I have. You can hear the voice of "Pappa" clearly on this version. I also have the Orson Welles version, but it's nothing like hearing the flat, midwestern voice of Hemingway itself.

  • @777oddball
    @777oddball Před 12 lety +1

    this really is fascinating, thankyou, i could listen to him narrate all day

  • @ajescudero
    @ajescudero Před rokem +1

    I wonder what my grandfather would've said if he watched this. He was there before coming to Argentina.

  • @TheGoodNews01
    @TheGoodNews01 Před 11 lety +18

    "Up here in Aargon one was among tens of thousands of people, mainly though not entirely of working-class origin, all living at the same level and mingling on terms of equality. In theory it was perfect equality, and even in practice it was not far from it." George Orwell - Homage to Catalonia.
    "As far as my purely personal preferences went I would have liked to join the Anarchists." George Orwell - Homage to Catalonia. Ⓐ.

  • @johnbaugh2437
    @johnbaugh2437 Před 3 lety +4

    Great film! I love Hemingway, but somehow I imagined a deeper tone to his voice.

    • @feliscorax
      @feliscorax Před rokem

      ^ Listening to a Russian oktavist: “Great singing! I love Russian oktavist oratory, but somehow I imagined a deeper tone to their voice.”

  • @TheRJS007
    @TheRJS007 Před 5 lety +9

    Thank you -- sincerely appreciate the upload. Wish Mr. Hemingway addressed the roles of both the Soviet Union which supplied military aid to the Republic and the Catholic Church which became an enemy of the Republic... RIP to all who perished during this horrible war.

    • @jcfrmcali
      @jcfrmcali Před 4 lety +4

      The "Republic" was an enemy of the Church.

    • @royborrill2711
      @royborrill2711 Před 2 lety

      @@jcfrmcali That's what they said. Can't you read English?

    • @CaptainCook1778
      @CaptainCook1778 Před rokem

      The Soviet Union betrayed the republicans as Stalin wanted control that they were not willing to give.
      The Nazis did a better job of supporting Franco’s fascists than Stalin did of supporting the “communist” republicans.

  • @kmask2002
    @kmask2002 Před 11 lety +1

    Thank you. This is excellent!

  • @isabelramoscoronado242
    @isabelramoscoronado242 Před 4 lety +2

    Nunca había visto la guerra civil española tan cruda como esta...SOLO PIDO A DIOS QUE NO VUELVA A PASAR NUNCA...

  • @rossclaughton6068
    @rossclaughton6068 Před 11 lety +2

    The NHS has worked extremely well for decades and most people in the UK support it. Things are much better for low income earners in Australia than in the US however you look at it. Working class people in the UK are more likely to support the NHS than anyone else as they are less likely to have private insurance.

  • @crazydragonkenpo
    @crazydragonkenpo Před 12 lety +6

    I live in Australia and spent my youth in NZ we are SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC..free enterprise and freedom of thought, emphasis on HUMAN rights and freedom of expression..we are also among the wealthiest and most free nations on earth....the balance between the rights of the individual and the inclusiveness of the economy is an imperative along with protections for the poor with free education and a safety net..but most of all FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION and FREEDOM OF THOUGHT. You are WRONG.

  • @josepollerbaldrich6290
    @josepollerbaldrich6290 Před 8 lety +4

    Is this the original soundtrack of the film? It is very strange, why all the music are Sardanes (catalan traditional music) and even "Segadors" the catalan Hymn?

    • @jacobbrach1569
      @jacobbrach1569 Před 5 lety +1

      From what I understand, Catalonia was a staunch supporter of the Republican cause. Could be that they were the only ones available at the time to record the soundtrack.

    • @Peter-ox7wh
      @Peter-ox7wh Před 4 lety +2

      Something normal I would say,Catalonia is an autonomous community of Spain.

  • @dewaynestark9607
    @dewaynestark9607 Před 8 lety +1

    Much about the filming of this movie is included in the book "Hotel Flordia" by Amanda Vaill.

  • @manthasagittarius1
    @manthasagittarius1 Před 12 lety +2

    You have a strange system of equations to please yourself: "Nazis and Fsacists are atheists. How do we know that? Atheists and Nazis and Fascists are bad, so they must all be the same thing. However, we sympathize with Franco,because he was religious, so he couldn't have been Fascist, because Fascists are bad, and we sympathize with Franco."
    Listen up: Franco was a Fascist. And he was bad.The Fascists were in bed with the Church; it was heavily, filthily implicated. And they were BAD. Got it?

  • @j_ortuno
    @j_ortuno Před 11 lety

    thank you so much !

  • @Ben10HetaliaGirl
    @Ben10HetaliaGirl Před 10 lety +1

    Watching this for class

    • @vestibulate
      @vestibulate Před 4 lety +2

      Ben10HetaliaGirl Watch it for the whole working class.

  • @dejnaM
    @dejnaM Před 12 lety +2

    I have read all his books. he was antifacist..not communist - it is in THAT book

  • @SteveonLI
    @SteveonLI Před 9 lety +1

    for lots of great background on this, read 'hotel florida' by amanda vaill

  • @apexxxx10
    @apexxxx10 Před 11 lety +2

    Kiitos

  • @user-zc6ul8nv1j
    @user-zc6ul8nv1j Před 11 lety +6

    Hemingway sounds like John C. Reilly lol

  • @LilCremes
    @LilCremes Před 2 měsíci

    End Part 1 7:55
    End Part 2 17:48
    End Part 3 24:39
    End Part 4 34:18
    End Part 5 42:52

  • @BeorhtFrognostic
    @BeorhtFrognostic Před 12 lety +1

    fascinating documentary

  • @egutiguti3337
    @egutiguti3337 Před rokem

    Good document. Bravo.

  • @joanhuffman2166
    @joanhuffman2166 Před rokem

    The Spanish Civil War is a reminder that sometimes both sides are bad. Sometimes, it's just team diablos vs team demonios. The one that wins will always be the worst, no matter which one wins.

  • @cowboyblu1
    @cowboyblu1 Před 3 lety +1

    Interesting film. But this film is not narrated by Hemingway. I have a record of him talking and this is not him Once he heard his voice recorded he never wanted to talk where he was recorded. He had a high voice and not at all comfortable reading. So apparently the film has been dubbed by some other voice.
    This revelation has nothing to do with the film as an historical document. Still a wonderful film.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Před 3 lety

      If it isn't the voice of Hemingway., it certainly sounds exactly like him. He was forever stiff and uncomfortable on camera and in recordings and had a flat, thin, monotone delivery. The Orson Welles version is far superior as Welles had a theatrically trained voice and delivered a more professional narration. The Welles version is available on CZcams as well.

  • @Ruggiemob
    @Ruggiemob Před 13 lety

    thank you

  • @supermandingo
    @supermandingo Před 6 lety +2

    19.00 hes a russian speaking spanish! his accent is very thick! this is not a spanish republican military it was a russian agent!

    • @setneuf47
      @setneuf47 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes, it seems that this "Comandante Carlos" (Vittorio Vidali), with russian accent, was born Italian :
      es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vittorio_Vidali

    • @setneuf47
      @setneuf47 Před 4 lety

      “El quinto regimiento” song :
      centremlm.be/La-chanson-espagnole-El-quinto-regimiento
      "...Con Líster, el Campesino,
      con Galán y con Modesto
      con el comandante Carlos
      no hay miliciano, con miedo..."

  • @crazydragonkenpo
    @crazydragonkenpo Před 12 lety +3

    oh and lest we forget there was an opportunity in 1981...NO ONE from the KING down to the lowest supported this attempt ..in fact both ARMY and DEMOCRATIC reps held firm against the thugs...So I guess your wrong then hey.

  • @christietheo2168
    @christietheo2168 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant!

  • @Stoolie33
    @Stoolie33 Před 8 lety +5

    I finally got a chance to watch The Spanish Earth in its entirety. An interesting view. A lot of video that is very well done, especially when considering it is pre-WW2 work. The narration-yes, I know it is Hemingway- is the worst documentary narration I have ever heard in any documentary I have ever watched. Brief comments, explaining nothing or giving some background. It's incredible. I came close to just stopping watching it but I might never watch it again and I thought the narration would improve. To put that much effort into capturing so much video of the Spanish Civil War and then having narration that poor is hard to believe.
    Oh, the same exact machine gun noise through the entire film is pathetic even for a 1937 work.

    • @erwinwoodedge4885
      @erwinwoodedge4885 Před 8 lety +2

      It''s a film - video hadn't been invented yet. As to your comments about the narration: the film is meant to be a documentary work of art, not an instruction film for ignorant people.

    • @Stoolie33
      @Stoolie33 Před 8 lety +1

      Erwin Woodedge
      Oh, the "It's art" take. Perfect in any situation. I defer.

  • @crazydragonkenpo
    @crazydragonkenpo Před 12 lety +2

    oh deary me ...the republic was in truth a democratic organ consisting of various groups INCLUDING communists politically it was more Social Democrat but due to the lack of material support from the great democracies was left to rely on STALINS supplies and the communists...remember the non communists were attacked by the communists in Catalonia..in short STALIN destroyed the revolution..the democracies regretted this action but nevertheless just like POLAND communism and fascism reigned supreme

  • @mbdireccion
    @mbdireccion Před 8 lety

    Hi. I´d like to know if I can take a couple of minutes of this video to show in my tv program. thanks. I mean about copyrights and things like that.

  • @AndrewStuartBrown
    @AndrewStuartBrown Před 12 lety +3

    Using, or knowing the meaning of the word "dialectic" doesn't make a man a red. Especially not in those times when many people were reading Marx and Engel and other theorists. And, in his letters, Hemingway expresses how he really felt about the Russians in the Spanish war. The Republic should have won that war. It might have gone some way toward preventing WW II. Nothing justifies Franco.

  • @johnfalkenstine8377
    @johnfalkenstine8377 Před 5 lety +5

    It was a propaganda film made by a Dutchman who worked for the Russians. The sound was dubbed in. Hemingway was played for a sucker by the Russians.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Před 2 lety

      Hemingway was not a sucker here. He knew what was going and had mixed feelings about doing propaganda.

  • @FuMeTaNuMbErOnE
    @FuMeTaNuMbErOnE Před 12 lety +1

    Si, asín es amigo.

  • @michaelphilossoff2663
    @michaelphilossoff2663 Před 12 lety

    i have no idea about the war. It's just historical and awesome

  • @acartres
    @acartres Před 11 lety +3

    directed by Joris Ivens

  • @dejnaM
    @dejnaM Před 12 lety +1

    I do not care about these analytics...I love him anyway :)

  • @dmoney668
    @dmoney668 Před rokem

    Amazing

  • @TheVanpablo79
    @TheVanpablo79 Před 11 lety +2

    why does it play the Catalan national anthem while talking about Madrid?

    • @diegorvila
      @diegorvila Před 5 lety +5

      Becuase it was made by a Ducth guy and two American guys who didn't understand much of what was going on.

  • @JoseRamalhodaSilvajunior-hq8gc

    Viva Espanha Viva El rei viva franco vida longa ao rei

  • @bmiltonb
    @bmiltonb Před 3 lety +1

    ¡Viva la Unión General de Trabajadores!

  • @johnnowlan2480
    @johnnowlan2480 Před 3 lety +1

    They shall not pass

  • @anacasanova7350
    @anacasanova7350 Před 2 lety

    Los españoles trabajando en el campo con las camisas blancas y limpias.😁🇪🇸🙅

  • @dejnaM
    @dejnaM Před 12 lety +1

    he was not communist!!!

  • @QQWEERTTYUUI
    @QQWEERTTYUUI Před 11 lety

    por cierto, atentos al soldado del 17:24 , tan lejano ese gesto y tan cercano al mismo tiempo...

  • @clawcross
    @clawcross Před 2 lety

    And the people back then were not impressed

  • @crazydragonkenpo
    @crazydragonkenpo Před 12 lety +1

    you now have a democratic system with a mixed economy and democracy and SPAIN in seen as a modern country and a player in world democracy , a member of the EU and respected throughout the world. I would have thought by now that the unreconstructed fascist in SPAIN would have worked out by now that it is THEY who were and are the danger to Spain and its free society..Freedom for all...not just the few.

  • @dogbitr5833
    @dogbitr5833 Před 7 lety +1

    WOW

  • @AndrewStuartBrown
    @AndrewStuartBrown Před 12 lety

    Can you cite your documentation for that? I'd enjoy looking it up.

  • @Tudestube
    @Tudestube Před 12 lety +6

    aha, yes, Spain was so lucky about have a guy like Franco...
    Ask catalan and euskal population about it, or simply ask the republican people, who lost the war... All ways of dictatorships are bad for the population, doesnt matter right or left handed ones.
    Dictatorships are only good if you are the dictator.

  • @1960Sawman
    @1960Sawman Před rokem

    Today, in 2022, the World Economic Forum is taking land from Dutch farmers.

  • @888ssss
    @888ssss Před rokem

    3:55 spanish rush hour traffic.....

  • @bingeltube
    @bingeltube Před 6 lety +1

    Hemingway's narration and comments are sparse and cold, matter of fact, distant

  • @olszaltot
    @olszaltot Před 9 lety +8

    Long live the anarchy.

  • @MrShaneVicious
    @MrShaneVicious Před 10 lety

    Anyone know the name of the song around the 2:50 mark ?

    • @claudiacuadra1685
      @claudiacuadra1685 Před 8 lety

      +MrShaneVicious I don't know exactly the name of the song but this kind of music is from Catalonia. Look up for "Musica Sardana". Sardana is the typical dance of Catalonia. Hope it helps!

    • @gideonlong
      @gideonlong Před 8 lety +1

      La Santa Espina

  • @rd264
    @rd264 Před 3 lety

    FDR refused to support the Republic or the Lincoln Brigade volunteers fighting against the Italian, German and Spanish Fascists. Shameful.

    • @asturiasceltic3183
      @asturiasceltic3183 Před 2 lety

      FDR actually secretly sent the Republic aid via France, but yeah they could have done a lot more to help democracy.

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 Před rokem

      Why, what business of America's was a civil war 3,000 miles away? Besides, FDR had his hands full trying to provoke Japan into a fight on the far side of the other ocean.
      George Washington had it right. The USA should not meddle in other countries.

  • @Pootycat8359
    @Pootycat8359 Před rokem

    It's interesting to note that many peasants welcomed the Nationalists, because they didn't confiscate their land, and guaranteed a fair price for their crops. In the Republican areas, however, farms were collectivized, and crops distributed, "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need." -- Kark Marx

    • @asturiasceltic3183
      @asturiasceltic3183 Před rokem

      It's interesting to note, the Second Republic were known as the common working man's party and many writers like Hemingway wrote they for the very first time have never ever seen more glorious parades in honor of the working people than the Second Republic conducted.

    • @Pootycat8359
      @Pootycat8359 Před rokem +2

      @@asturiasceltic3183 Yes, but....I recommend reading "Ode to Catalonia," by George Orwell. It was his experience fighting for the Republic, as a "POUM" volunteer, that showed him the "dark side" of the Republic. In that region of Spain, there was a "civil war within a civil war," in which the communists loyal to Moscow, fought, and exterminated, the independent POUM communists.

    • @asturiasceltic3183
      @asturiasceltic3183 Před rokem

      @@Pootycat8359 I read it a billion times. Orwell said his heart will always be with the Second Republic. The Second Republic were not communists. They received aid from Russia who undermined them. Of course they are going to receive aid from anyone when they are the common working man going against the Nazis, Hitler, the pedo Church, Mussolini and the general Army of Spain and the elites who didn't think the common working person should have equal rights.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Před rokem +1

      @@asturiasceltic3183 Some historians say that Stalin was not interested in taking over Spain as much as insuring that the fascists didn't. Stalin did not want to annoy potential allies in the upcoming conflict with Germany.

  • @kikojimenez9913
    @kikojimenez9913 Před 2 lety

    Please, exist sub? Sub spanish

  • @ctbarfield
    @ctbarfield Před 9 lety +9

    Interesting that Lister and La Passionaria were not identified as Communists. They were praised as heroes, but their communism was left out the film.

    • @rodrigofonseca6241
      @rodrigofonseca6241 Před 9 lety +10

      Hmmm.. maybe because this is from 1937, an age in which mcCarthism hadn't brainwashed americans' yet and communists were able to be praised for their heroism, despite their "level of communism"?

    • @thebeans6534
      @thebeans6534 Před 9 lety +2

      It should be assumed since Hemingway and Dos Passos were involved, and both were supporters of the Republican cause.

    • @HolyknightVader999
      @HolyknightVader999 Před 9 lety +4

      *****
      Communists in the Spanish Civil War slaughtered Catholics for being Catholics. They're no heroes.

    • @rodrigofonseca6241
      @rodrigofonseca6241 Před 9 lety +6

      HolyknightVader999 Indeed the international brigades commited some wrong doings, which happens in many wars. But if those volunteers who fought fascism are not heroes i think no one can be entitled that way. The catholic church in Spain was - and still is - a bunch of child molesters, fanatics who live in the middle ages, but with big opulence at expenses of the poor and the alleged charity.

    • @rodrigofonseca6241
      @rodrigofonseca6241 Před 9 lety +1

      HolyknightVader999 Children are safe in catholic church? OK...

  • @riverboatgmblr
    @riverboatgmblr Před 11 lety +6

    Republican in Spain had a way different meaning than Eisenhower Republican. I'm no fan of fascism, but Hemingway was a great writer full of much crap.

  • @zocogodo2351
    @zocogodo2351 Před 7 lety +2

    el himno de riego con dos pelotas larga vida a la replublica y gloria a las brigadas internacionales viva la republicaaaaaa

  • @rossclaughton6068
    @rossclaughton6068 Před 11 lety +2

    Yes and Proffessionals in the UK make better money than those in the US because the UK is not dominated by conservative corporations who only care about there own profits.
    The reason the UK is a good place to live is because it has things like the NHS which is about as Socialist as it gets!! A Labourer in the UK or Australia can make four times what they would in the US!! SERIOUSLY, GROW UP AND READ A BOOK BOY !!

  • @hughsmith4464
    @hughsmith4464 Před 3 lety

    He was a red to the bone

  • @isabellesanchez4064
    @isabellesanchez4064 Před 6 lety

    Pas sous titrage ni version française

    • @setneuf47
      @setneuf47 Před 4 lety

      La voici, la version sous-titrée :
      www.dailymotion.com/video/x6d2do9

  • @wdobni
    @wdobni Před rokem +1

    pretty awful little film....you can see hemingway's style all over it....long on donkey shots and walking peasants and very short on analysis....the spanish republicans wanted a communist revolution in spain and they put a communist/anarchist government in place in barcelona but of course it all fell apart because nobody could agree on what to do next......i doubt that hemingway understood what was going on in the bigger picture although he clearly appreciated that the campesinos were impoverished and needed a better deal....this film was a big missed opportunity but hemingway had other things going on and astute analysis wasn't his strong suit

    • @asturiasceltic3183
      @asturiasceltic3183 Před rokem +1

      the Second Republic rejected communism. They were Democrat Socialists fighting for democracy and human rights. Learn about their reforms before posting.

  • @rafaelroa1955
    @rafaelroa1955 Před 2 lety

    Ni se si la banda sonora que se ha puesto en esta versión es la original o no, pero me parece repugnante que los campesinos de Fuentidueña se acompañen de música popular catalana , siempre estos listos apropiándose de la historia.

  • @portus3910
    @portus3910 Před 11 lety +4

    one of my grandfathers fhad to fought to the fascist army (he had no choice) and the other one fought for the republicans.
    They were friends after the marriage of my parents. Fuck politics.

    • @royborrill2711
      @royborrill2711 Před 5 lety +1

      Of course he had a choice. He was a coward and a traitor

  • @centaureacyanus7675
    @centaureacyanus7675 Před 3 lety

    LC

  • @zeusvalentine
    @zeusvalentine Před 12 lety +3

    Nothing good came from Franco? many Spaniards have a far different recollection of the Franco years than you have expressed.
    especially compared to the "enlightened era" that Spain is now in , a full fledged depression.

  • @anacasanova7350
    @anacasanova7350 Před 2 lety +1

    Pobres brigadistas, que desengaño. Que derrota, lo que hacen los ideales infundados . Que descansen en paz en la católica España.😌🇪🇸🙅

  • @guillermoramos9788
    @guillermoramos9788 Před 9 lety +23

    well they intended to portray the Republican as a democrats but they weren´t democrats, in fact, the Spanish second republic was doomed from the start, the Republic was hijacked by communists, anarchists and socialists in their pursuit to establish a Soviet in Spain, another USSR in Spain, fortunately they failed to achieve it

    • @P1B1U1H1
      @P1B1U1H1 Před 9 lety +3

      The telling of Franco's victory is a threnody for the sanctity of life. If Spain celebrates fascism, it must return Guernica to New York, for our great nation was responsible in part for the defeat of the most evil force in history.

    • @valmie1
      @valmie1 Před 9 lety +3

      l'histoire a bien montré qui a combattu le fascisme hitlérien, italien et français entre autre. Répéter que les républicains espagnols étaient des communistes et des anarchistes ne changent rien au fait que des militaires ont provoqué un coup d'état avec le soutien de l'Eglise espagnole contre la jeune république élue :
      Dès septembre 1936, Pie XI avait dénoncé la "haine de Dieu satanique professée par les républicains".
      Les 3 élections générales (résultats)
      Élections générales du 28 novembre 1931
      Large victoire de la coalition des républicains et des socialistes, avec une participation de 65 % de l'électorat. La nouvelle composition des Cortès implique une rupture radicale avec le système des partis de la Monarchie.
      Élections générales du 19 novembre 1933
      Premières élections réellement démocratiques, avec pour la première fois, la participation des femmes. Les abstentions furent nombreuses dans les zones à majorité anarchiste, mais beaucoup moins dans celles de droite. La gauche perdit en premier lieu parce que dans un système favorable aux coalitions, elle était désunie et en second lieu, la propagande nourrie de la droite (regroupée au tour de la CEDA), parvient à minimiser les réalisations des républicains. La participation de 67,45 % dépasse légèrement les précédentes.
      Élections générales du 16 février 1936
      Le Front populaire, formé par les républicains, les socialistes et les communistes gagnent les élections. Il s'agit d'un retour du panorama politique espagnol qui mène à la victoire la gauche plurielle, battue en 1933. Le taux de participation est incontestablement de loin le plus haut des deux dernières, 73 %. Elles furent aussi les dernières avant la tragédie.

    • @mariacebrian1403
      @mariacebrian1403 Před 9 lety +7

      P1B1U1H1 USA didn't liberate Spain from fascism! In fact it helped to perpetuate it installing bases in it. Then it was when Franco was able to breath and think there was never going to be a revolution to outs him from power.

    • @P1B1U1H1
      @P1B1U1H1 Před 9 lety +3

      The fascist monsters.

    • @P1B1U1H1
      @P1B1U1H1 Před 8 lety +1

      +PandaTimeNow They were the foulest monsters in history; their detestable progeny are the Islamists, now attempting to conquer the world & impose mass slavery.

  • @bozulzrican
    @bozulzrican Před 7 lety +1

    Spain '37 Syria '17

    • @bozulzrican
      @bozulzrican Před 7 lety +3

      Spain looks like island you can't go. Rebels are now not supported by Nazi Germany but Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

    • @thezeroalchemist277
      @thezeroalchemist277 Před 7 lety

      Edmon Dantes to be honest, half a million people were exiled by the end of the war... not that I blame them, though

    • @bbinkovitz
      @bbinkovitz Před 4 lety

      ✊her bijî ypj ✊her bijî ypg ✊

  • @Rafael-lr4gn
    @Rafael-lr4gn Před 5 lety +1

    Same race of dogs fighting each other..

  • @miguelmouta5372
    @miguelmouta5372 Před rokem

    Ernest Commieway…

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Před rokem

      FBI had a file on him. Hemingway was paranoid about this in his final days.

    • @asturiasceltic3183
      @asturiasceltic3183 Před rokem

      @@SandfordSmythe FDR supported the Second Republic and sent them aid.

  • @crazydragonkenpo
    @crazydragonkenpo Před 11 lety

    Then study the USA and the English world...get educated bro

  • @rockyfjord6982
    @rockyfjord6982 Před 11 lety +1

    Those were the days. Read Dos Passos in high school, quite a revelation, then there was Vietnam. Now we got 7 billion and global capitalism. Soon we'll be out of fossil fuel and 10 bil
    people, US will collapse under unstoppable Mexican migration and foreign debt. Computer engineers will rule the world. The past always looks better, at least since the 1960's. I hate the
    world that capitalism has created, and socialism is merely a response to capitalism, not a
    dissolution of it. Humanity can suck.

  • @harleyyoung7305
    @harleyyoung7305 Před 6 lety +1

    New recruits of the peoples army....what Hemmingway is not telling you is that the bolchavics and the americans are on the same team. Same star, just different color.

  • @dantruitt1138
    @dantruitt1138 Před 10 lety

    Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.......

  • @TheScientist0000000
    @TheScientist0000000 Před 12 lety

    I always thought all the smiting god did was in the old testament - beefore jesus died for our sins? here's a hypothetical: spanish inquisition. Who do you smite? Also, if the jews and babylonians smite-cancelled themselves out, who was even left to worship god?

  • @Zaragoza2006
    @Zaragoza2006 Před 11 lety +1

    The system you talk about , the - social-democracy is dying as we speak. There is no middle ground, Socialsm is like cancer, if you dont cut it out it will spread , you either have free economy of individuals or you have socialsm. The most succesfull state in the world is USA because they are the most capitalist than any other country in the world. However they move away from it , chosing Obama etc. , they will fall , and I hope it will be a lesson for us all

  • @Zaragoza2006
    @Zaragoza2006 Před 11 lety

    NHS in the UK costs billions in taxpayers subsidy. It is not working well. How can you call it a good thing when you need to rob massive sums of money from the working people to keep it going? It's like USSR where everything had to be subsidised untill it collapsed which is what awaits european socialist countries in the near future as well.
    What labourer earns and where is dependant on many things, and one most important is the cost of living which is huge in australia and low in the US.

    • @Idcanymore510
      @Idcanymore510 Před 5 lety +1

      A lot has happened in 6 years eh. But most americans are still completely ignorant of the realities of the world outside their borders. FYI Europe (EU) because of it's welfare consensus is richer than the US, has less violent crime, lower disparity between rich and poor, better eduucated (not difficult) than the US. The NHS is supported by the overwhelming majority and are happy to pay taxes to maintain it. We don't have people NOT recieving care because they don't have the money or private medical insurance. People dying of curable and prevantable illneses for lack of funds. That's barbaric and uncivilised, especially if you claim to be the richest country in the world! We look at you with your gun-crazed fanatics, religious fundamentalists and 3rd world poverty in your inner cities and rural areas and you are nothing to want to emulate.

  • @Zaragoza2006
    @Zaragoza2006 Před 11 lety

    Look , youre living at the very end of the world. You've got natural resources, no military threat , no wars since a long time. Your people are few , you can play at socialism etc. and you can get along I am sure. But dont tell people who sacrifised hundreds of thousands of best men fighting off the socialist scourge , both nazis and soviets that this is the way to go. You simply live in a different world my friend.

  • @SilvioManfredDante85
    @SilvioManfredDante85 Před 11 lety +1

    Lame

  • @Cravior
    @Cravior Před 6 lety

    Amazing

  • @florencianuro
    @florencianuro Před 12 lety

    thank you