Gun City

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If you enjoyed Damnation (see other thread) you may enjoy a made for Netflix Spanish film called Gun City. Originally titled
La sombra de la ley, it follows a detective of the Information Brigade in Barcelona in 1921 who tries to track down a hijacked train shipment of guns. The corrupt police initially target Anarchists as the perps but (spoiler!) the evidence leads elsewhere despite their attempts to frame them. This all takes place during the CNT General Strike of that year in which the anarcho-syndicalists, fighting for social justice and worker rights, brought everything to a halt and...(well...spoilers!).
Lots of guns of the era are featured (some of which they got wrong! Will you spot them?).
Based on real historical events that led to a coup and then, 10 years later,the Second Spanish Republic.
It’s not as good as Damnation (I don’t think), but still a watchable period piece.

I could only find a trailer on YouTube that was dubbed into French with English subtitles.
The movie is in Spanish and Catalan with subtitles. Steaming on Netflix.




https://culturedvultures.com/gun-city-2018-review/
When crime films such as The Godfather and Goodfellas serve as the benchmark for quality crime dramas, it can be daunting for other genre efforts to follow. Personally, I believe Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in America is superior to both of those films, but as the Dude would say, “Yeah, well, you know, that’s just like, uh, your opinion, man.” So when smaller films like Netflix’s recent offering Gun City (La sombra de la ley) comes along, they may easily be dismissed or overlooked. Although plot mechanics and clichés affect Gun City —when has that never been the case with the genre?— it remains an engrossing period piece, more akin to Gomorrah and Once Upon a Time in America in scope.

Netflix has released Gun City to coinciding with a theatrical release in Europe. The film follows a war veteran named Aníbal Uriarte (Luis Tosar) who is sent from Madrid to assist the Barcelona police in locating a stolen shipment of military weapons. Serving as a backdrop to the action, Director Dani de la Torre explores the political and social unrest in 1921 Spain that led to Primo de Rivera’s 1923 coup d’ètat.

When Uriarte joins Inspector Rediú’s team in searching for the missing guns, he is exposed to the city’s seedy underworld. In a role that draws comparisons to Clint Eastwood’s “Man with No Name” character, we see Tosar’s Uriarte navigate among multiple groups in order to gain information—the corrupt police force, El Barón’s crime ring, and a group of anarchists that is striking for equality and better working conditions.

Central to the plot is the relationship built between Uriarte and Sara Ortiz (Michelle Jenner). Uriarte first meets her when she leads a protest for women’s rights. She is the daughter of Salvador Ortiz, a labor leader who has organized a factory workers strike. Most impressive is how their character arcs fully develop over the course of the film. As they learn to trust each other, they must question their allegiances and ideals.

Uriarte and Sara’s relationship ties into the film’s strongest conflict, which revolves around her father’s inability to prevent the group of anarchists from splintering. Ortiz believes in peaceful protest, while a young worker named León argues that change can only come through violence. This power struggle culminates in an emotionally devastating scene that is punctuated by a score reminiscent of Ennio Morricone’s “Deborah’s Theme” from Once Upon a Time in America.

Gun City delivers plenty of action, which will definitely appeal to fans of Netflix’s Peaky Blinders. However, the film is a more methodical exploration of Spain’s socio-political climate at the time. Its dense storyline—plus the fact that dialogue is presented in Spanish with English subtitles—may not gel with audiences looking for mindless action, à la Gangster Squad.

The film also boasts impressive period detail, almost seamlessly recreating 1920s Barcelona with minimally intrusive CGI. One minor qualm is that a majority of weapons used in the production are anachronistic to the time period, according to the Goofs section on Gun City’s IMDB page.

Another technical achievement is the film’s cinematography. When Uriarte is first taken to El Barón’s cabaret Eden, an impressive one-shot explores the establishment. The camera travels up the grand stairway into the club and through the dressing rooms before emerging from the stage wings and craning back into the main room. However, sometimes the cinematography draws too much attention to itself—such as an instance in the cabaret which recreates a famous sequence from 1927’s Wings—and almost ruins the magic onscreen.

The seams show during other instances, especially when the filmmakers reference successful films. At one point, a character creates a scorpion out of wire, similarly to how Edward James Olmos’ Gaff makes origami figures out of paper in Blade Runner.

While Gun City must rely on established genre tropes, they hardly feel trite—with one exception. Throughout the course of the film, Sara and other women are faced with misogyny and the threat of sexual violence as a means of coercion. Thankfully, it doesn’t reach the level of the sort of depravity as depicted in Sergio Leone’s otherwise masterful Once Upon a Time in America. Despite how the misogyny represents a societal problem and present danger that Sara and others fight against as they champion gender equality, the filmmakers could have approached the subject with more sensitivity or removed it altogether.

Lastly, as immersive as the story is with its cast of interesting characters, some subplots and secondary characters do not get their proper due. In effect, the cornerstone of the plot—the search for missing military weapons—is lessened to the point to where it feels like a MacGuffin, rather than the narrative’s driving force. That is not necessarily a bad thing, especially since Gun City is a character-driven period drama. But when all is said and done, we begin to care less about the main mission since the remaining loose ends aren’t entirely accounted for.

In light of its shortcomings, Gun City presents a layered critique of the social-political state of Spain in the 1920s in the guise of a crime film.
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Re: Gun City

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Sounds great, I'll look for it. A comparison to Gomorrah is high praise.
Barcelona in the 1920s was known as the most radical and bloody place in Europe and acquired the nickname Barcelona – anarchism’s rose of fire. At the height of unrest the owners hired assassins to murder troublesome Union leaders. Meanwhile, the population of the city had expanded from a mere 110,000 in the beginning of the 1800s to over a million by 1930 mainly due to the demand for labour in its industrial expansion.

When King Alfonso XIII (1902-1931) was forced to abdicate in 1931, Cátalunia decided to declare itself as a Republic in the nonexistent Federation of Iberia. This desire for independence of Madrid encouraged other cities and helped to create the most ungovernable state of Spain which in turn in 1936 led to the costly Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). Barcelona and the Catalans became the font of the Republican’s cause.
https://www.spain-barcelona.com/barcelona/history.htm

In 1923 the king was forced to appoint General Miguel Primo de Rivera prime minister (in effect dictator). The constitution was suspended and martial law declared. Primo de Rivera's son Antonio went on to create the Spanish Falange (Fascist) Party.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Re: Gun City

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Finished it, it's a 2 hour movie not a series of episodes. It's set about 1923 in Barcelona just before the internal coup in Spain. A shipment of military rifles was stolen from a train and Anibal Uriarte a Basque (in Catalonia), is sent from Madrid to help the Barcelona police find them. The police are convinced that anarchists stole the weapons. A lot of different groups: corrupt police, corrupt military, civil guard, corrupt business owners, anarchists, union organizers and ordinary people. The special effects make Barcelona look like it did in the 1920s, great job. A chaotic period leading up the the revolution in 1936.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

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