The Old Man and the Whale
A manÂ’s story. A peopleÂ’s plight. A disputed history.
Where does memory end and history begin?
In 1939, Antonio de Ertze Garamendi was a young sailor from the Basque Country caught
up in the Spanish Civil War. The Basques were persecuted when FrancoÂ’s forces
triumphed.
The deposed Republican Government had concealed a fortune in Spanish treasure to
keep it from Franco. When they were defeated orders were sent that a ship should collect
the hidden treasure and take it to Mexico to support the fleeing refugees. But when the
treasure reached Mexico almost all of it went missing.
Antonio Ertze was First Engineer on that ship.
Now 94-years-old, AntonioÂ’s tales of his flight entwine themselves with the 20th century
history of the Basque people and of the Spanish Civil War.
But there are contradictions in AntonioÂ’s story and some will say that not all of it is wholly
true. How did they escape FrancoÂ’s Navy? How did they get the treasure into Mexico?
What happened to the fortune? Yet Antonio has meticulous notes and records of the
names and dates involved and says: “I have my truth, others have theirs. If we all told the
same stories we would be nothing more than canaries.”
Shot on a return visit to the Basque Country, The Old Man and the Whale sets AntonioÂ’s
story to images of the textures, colours and landscapes of the home of one of EuropeÂ’s
oldest people which asks us to explore the difference between memory and history.