AL FIN DE GUERRE
At first glance the story
line in this French film, sub-titled in English, set in the mid-1960’s about
the trials, tribulations, frustrations and sexual adventures (this is a
commercial film, after all) of an exiled underground Spanish Communist Party
functionary still working to defeat the Franco regime in Spain would seem a
little dated. However, two things retrieve it from that fate. First, despite
the victory of Franco in 1939 those who fought the Civil War on the Republican
side most definitely had some unfinished business. Thus, the exploration, even
if only cinematically, of the dangers and pitfalls of the necessary underground
work in the fight against reactionary regimes still rings true as a lesson for
latter day struggles. Secondly, an exploration of the wear and tear on
committed cadre still fighting the good fight under much more trying
circumstances than we currently face should help those who are trying to fight
against today’s ‘monsters’.
An interesting sidelight of
the film is the counter-position of the strategies of the old guard Spanish
Communist underground leadership committed to patient, if unrewarding, work to
gain a hearing from the masses and what turned out to be the Spanish “New Left” of the 1960’s that was
looking for more demonstrative means of igniting those same masses. Thus the
issue presented in the film of the classical general strike proposed by the old
guard versus what amounted to urban guerilla warfare, including spectacular
individual acts of terrorism, once again was played out on the Spanish left.
Who won the argument? Well the class war still goes on so to pose the question
is to give the answer. That in the end General Franco died in his bed in the
mid-1970s is, however, something no progressive should have been or should be
happy about.
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