index

Bloody Sunday

Bloody Sunday

■ Basic Data

ItemContent
Year2002
CountryUnited Kingdom, Ireland
DirectorPaul Greengrass
CastJames Nesbitt, Tim Pigott-Smith, Nicholas Farrell, Gerard McSorley, Kathy Kiera Clarke
GenreHistorical drama

■ Title Language Table

LanguageTextRomanization
EnglishBloody Sunday
EspañolBloody SundayBloody Sunday
FrançaisBloody SundayBloody Sunday
DeutschBloody SundayBloody Sunday
PortuguêsDomingo SangrentoDomingo Sangrento
ItalianoBloody SundayBloody Sunday
РусскийКровавое воскресеньеKrovavoye voskresenye
中文(简体)血腥星期天
中文(繁體)血腥星期天
한국어블러디 선데이Beulleodi Seondei
ไทยBloody SundayBloody Sunday
Tiếng ViệtChủ nhật đẫm máuChu nhat dam mau
Bahasa IndonesiaBloody SundayBloody Sunday
日本語ブラディ・サンデーBuradi Sande

■ One-Line Definition

👉 A work that depicts a structure in which civil rights protest and state violence collide within a politically occupied public street


■ Synopsis

A civil rights march in Derry turns into a massacre, transforming political grievance into historical trauma.


■ RECIPE Tags

#StateViolence #CivilResistance #HistoricalTrauma #PublicTruth


■ Primary Axis

  • Entry: Can peaceful protest remain protected when authority defines it as threat?
     Reason: Civic action is forced into a security framework before violence erupts.
     Related Film: Selma
  • Middle: Can official power control the meaning of its own violence?
     Reason: The event becomes a struggle between witnessed reality and institutional narrative.
     Related Film: In the Name of the Father
  • Core: Can a community survive when public truth is denied by the state?
     Reason: The massacre persists as collective injury because accountability is obstructed.
     Related Film: The Battle of Algiers

■ Secondary Axes

  • Occupied space and civilian exposure: Public streets become zones where political bodies are rendered vulnerable.
     Related Film: Hunger
  • Event memory and political escalation: A single day becomes a structural turning point for future conflict.
     Related Film: United 93

■ Person

  • Director: Paul Greengrass
  • Cast: James Nesbitt, Tim Pigott-Smith, Nicholas Farrell, Gerard McSorley, Kathy Kiera Clarke

■ Structural Tags

#PublicSuppression #NarrativeControl #AccountabilityBlockage


■ Attribute Tags

#UnitedKingdom #Ireland #2000s #HistoricalDrama

TOC