Field for Men
Galician land ownership was a matter of concern for the Class Cinema Collective in this film, where a comparative review of the situations of Galician and Andalusian peasants at the end of Franco's regime was proposed, after several decades of political interventions to reverse the advances proposed by the Agrarian Reform of the Second Republic, but also due to the impact of the use of new machinery and fertilizers, which led to an increase in production but, at the same time, meant a decline in peasant employment, the abandonment of the countryside and migration to big cities.
