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Bread And Roses [VHS] [2001]

Bread And Roses [VHS] [2001]Director: Ken Loach
Actors: Pilar Padilla, Adrien Brody, Elpidia Carrillo, Jack McGee, Monica Rivas
Studio: Cinema Club
Category: Video

List Price: £5.99  (EUR6.72)
Buy Used: £4.25  (EUR4.77)
as of 31/7/2010 20:28 IST details
You Save: £1.74  (EUR1.95) (29%)

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Used (6) from £4.25  (EUR4.77)

Seller: thebooklocker
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 15,007

Format: PAL, Subtitled
Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: VHS Tape
Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 106 Minutes

EAN: 5014138294199
ASIN: B00005A7U3

Theatrical Release Date: October 4, 2001
Release Date: January 13, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
A fine piece of polemical cinema, Ken Loach's Bread and Roses tells the story of the successful "Justice for Janitors" campaign, which helped establish improved pay and working conditions for the largely Latin American unskilled workforce in Los Angeles. Pilar Padilla plays Maya, who, following a traumatic crossing of the Mexican border, manages to find her older sister Rosa and eventually find work as a janitor. There, she runs into labour organiser Sam (Adrien Brody) when he evades security guards in a comical, Keystone cop-chase through an office building. He persuades her to join his campaign and a tentative romance blossoms.

Bread and Roses is a "Hollywood" movie with a difference, filmed in and around corporate LA but homing in on the lives of the ignored army of grotesquely underpaid, often illegal immigrants who give the area its sheen. At times, the semi-documentary footage of meetings and demos slackens the dramatic pace and it's interesting that the film's strongest scene is when the sceptical Rosa cuts through her sister's pro-union spiel with a devastating speech about the realities of her own life (she had to work as a prostitute). While this an imperfect movie, its political point hits home hard. Brody as Sam in particular brings a streak of fun to the movie.

On the DVD: Scene selection, language options and the original trailer are included but the best bonus is a 50-minute documentary about the making of the film, focussing on the life of one of the extras, Rosa, herself a janitors' rights campaigner. While not centre stage in the film, Rosa brings a great energy and authenticity to the set. She refers to Roach affectionately as a "little old man", dreams of shoving a vacuum hose up her bosses' asses and is flown home to El Salvador to give her estranged grandchildren trainers and a telling off. Excellent.--David Stubbs


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6



5 out of 5 stars Riview of film   April 8, 2009
Mrs. Mavis Walker (UK)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I purchased this film for our local film club. Although I did not watch the film myself, the people who did go the film were very happy with the film.


4 out of 5 stars A class consicous worker is born...   April 18, 2008
Ogun Eratalay
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This film of Ken Loach depicts a labour issue in the United States. Janitors who are working in the cleaning business of great plazas face a great dilemma. They live in harsh conditions, earn just enough to barely avoid hunger but the places they clean and work are for higher elite of the society. Workers want to change this situation by fighting for their rights and by demanding higher wages and social security. They try to get organised but hard days await them. Betrayal, police brutality and arrests are in store for the workers. In the end will they insist on fighting or will they give up the struggle? There are some side issues in the film also. One is the problem of illegal immigration. Every year thousands of Latin Americans cross the United States border in order to get into the "dream" country. They are usually caught and sent back, but the succesfull ones work illegally for fear of deportation on lowest of wages for longer hours. They usually end up in illegal jobs such as prostution or drugs dealing.The other issue is the disunity among workers. Workers who accepted the issue of organising themselves slowly fade away as the struggle gets tougher. Some are blamed by their families, some sneak behind their educational careers but they eventually fall back. Their reasons are understandable but in the end thay fail to keep their word. A very real and dramatic film with a worker's point of view.


4 out of 5 stars Great stuff   July 29, 2007
Paula Brown (Bristol, UK)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I loved this, it was romantic yet tough, ended well, all the characters suitably flawed yet appealing, it was filmed without the actors knowing the full plot and I think it showed.


4 out of 5 stars Bread and Roses for Social Work   June 28, 2005
social work student (Oldham)
9 out of 18 found this review helpful

Having first watched this film as part of a BA (HONS) Social Work Degree course I found, as did the rest of the tutor group, that it portrays the struggle of working class people in pursuit of equality against a backdrop of corporate bullying and authoritarian control. Though it doesn't match the Hollywood grandour of popular epics (the special effects are sadly lacking and love scenes are non existant) it does provoke thought and is an essential tool for anyone undertaking Groupwork as part of their social work training. It shows a passion for change that is sadly lacking today.


2 out of 5 stars tries too hard to make a point   March 9, 2005
3 out of 15 found this review helpful

Dodgy acting, awful dialogue and lacks subtlety. This is an attempt to make a political point, but that point gets in the way of entertainment...as a bit of a lefty, I wanted to enjoy it, but I couldn't help but decide that it was a bad film. pity, because his film on the spanish civil war was great.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 6


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