Tracking Loach
Politics, Practices, Production
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:31st Dec '22
Should be back in stock very soon
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£95.00(9781474442114)

Tracking Loach presents a ground-breaking and unique contribution to the study of cinema. Archibald was granted unprecedented access to observe one of world cinema's most celebrated and controversial filmmakers, Ken Loach, while he was making the 2012 feature The Angels Share, which received The Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. This book draws on this knowledge to offer a first-hand account of the director's celebrated working methods, supplemented with insights gleaned from the British Film Institute's Loach archive, and analysis of his wider output and film-related political activity. Archibald has been 'Tracking Loach' for over three decades, as film viewer, film critic and film academic, and this inside perspective not only offers fresh insights into Loach's films and how they are made, but also highlights the benefits of production studies to the understanding of cinema more broadly.
David Archibald’s book, Tracking Loach, is an academic celebration of Ken Loach’s 60 year career in socialist filmmaking and political activism. There is so much to discover and learn from its unique, rigorous and genuinely heartfelt exploration of one of the maestros of modern British cinema and modern British politics, Ken Loach. It is highly recommended. -- Brett Gregory * Culture Matters *
David Archibald’s book, Tracking Loach, is an academic celebration of Ken Loach’s 60-year career in socialist filmmaking and political activism. There is so much to discover from its unique, rigorous and heartfelt exploration of one of the maestros of modern British cinema and modern British politics. It is highly recommended. -- Brett Gregory * Morning Star *
David Archibald’s excellent study … successfully distinguishes what makes Loach’s approach to filmmaking politically distinct and radical in contrast to commercial modes of filmmaking and the larger structures of capitalism. In its focus on Loach’s technique, Archibald’s analysis offers a path forward for future directorial studies that deemphasize auteurism for a more nuanced focus on the team dynamics that inform the process of filmmaking. -- Daniel Moore * Film Quarterly *
Moving far beyond textual analysis, David Archibald takes us on to Loach’s set, introduces us to his collaborators, and reveals the collective working methods and practices that shape ‘a Ken Loach film’. This remarkably distinctive piece of scholarship offers a much needed challenge to conventional readings of film authorship. -- David Forrest, University of Sheffield
[Tracking Loach] successfully adds to existing studies of Loach’s work by filling in some of the gaps in our understanding of Loach’s working methods and encouraging greater attention to processes of production. -- John Hill * Cineaste *
Archibald’s study is an extremely valuable contribution to understanding Loach’s work, and others who have adopted, often by direct influence, similar working methods. -- Mike Wayne * Journal of Class & Culture *
David Archibald provides a thorough analysis of the many facets of Ken Loach’s work as one of the most consistent and radical filmmakers in Britain. With a carefully argued methodology and a thorough case study, based on the production process of The Angels' Share, his book offers eloquent insight into this significant director and his work. -- Rod Stoneman, NUI Galway
ISBN: 9781474442121
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
192 pages