Today’s movie is a drama with a scene that happens on
January 30. Watch it tonight and enjoy.
BLOODY SUNDAY
The Northern Ireland Civil Rights
Association, led by a non-sectarian Protestant parliamentarian Ivan Cooper
plans a peaceful march in LondonDerry for civil rights on January 30, 1972
[2:45 to 1:34:35] , while the government has banned all marches. The British government brings in the Army,
which plans if shooting starts to shoot back.
Cooper insists on marching in order to maintain his credibility in the
civil rights movement. He communicates through the police that he does not want
a confrontation, but the army ignores this statement. The march begins.
However, British troops appear atop the wall separating Protestant and Catholic
areas. Then at a point where the march is supposed to turn right, some of the
crowd turns left. This brings them up
against an army barricade. Cooper tries to get the marchers turned around, but
then the army opens up with water cannon. Some youths start throwing stones,
while the army responds with tear gas. Then the army opens fire hitting 2
people. This infuriates the crowd.
Cooper and his cohorts address the marchers. The army moves forward to
arrest the stone throwers. The army starts using live ammo, killing twelve and
wounding 14. The army immediately
claims its men were fired on. All is chaos at the hospital with relatives of
the dead and wounded rubbing elbows with the army. Army troops plant nail bombs
on a body. In exactly the opposite effect that the Army’s action was supposed
to have, dozens of men join the IRA. Cooper is stunned by what has happened. He
makes a speech condemning the army’s action.
A powerful film. This film shows
that the violence only begot more violence that lasted for 25 years. Uses almost a documentary style.
The Troubles: Ireland’s Ordeal
1966-1996 and the Search for Peace by Tim Pat Coogan
(Roberts Rinehart Publishers,
Boulder, CO, 1996) at page 134 and the film at 2:50 give the date of the march
Producer - Mark Redhead
Director - Paul Greengrass
Screenplay - Paul Greengrass
Runtime – 1 hour 45 minutes
Released – January 16, 2002
Starring –
James Nesbitt as Ivan Cooper
Simon Mann as Col Derek Wilford
Tim Pigott-Smith as Major General Ford
Nicholas Farrell as Brigadier Maclellan
Allan Gildea as Kevin McCorry
Gerard Crossan as Eamonn McCann
Mary Moulds as Bernadette Devlin
Copyright by Ivan Walters in 2015
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