Antonio-10
"No te enteras del mundo en que estás" ("You're not even aware of the world you live in": this line more or less sums up a movie that has to do with the many duplicitous ways in which ignorant... well-meaning?... people sustain and nourish a system that brutalizes and marginalize both citizens and immigrants. The rough, hand-held filming is interesting, as are other "brutally honest" aspect of the treatment of the theme. Other Spanish films of the same sub-genre (EL BOLA, BARRIO, SOLAS, BWANA) maybe were... more honest and perhaps a bit less saccharin. Admirable, despite the unfortunate amount of tears and tugs at the heart. This has to do of course with the play the movie is based on: José Luis Alonso de Santos' SALVAJES. One is left wondering in the end of the topic of Spain's "others" isn't woefully fetishized.
whpratt1
Enjoyed this film and was very glad there was English captions which read very fast. Marisa Paredes,(Berta) played a woman who worked in a hospital in Spain and was a single mom who had to raise two boys and one girl. The children sort of got involved with the wrong crowd and each of them got into deep trouble. The children's friends were all racist, hated everyone, no matter what your race or religion. Some praised Hitler and the Nazi way of doing things to other human beings no one would dream of doing. Imanol Arias, (Eduardo) was a police officer who got the hots over this middle aged woman, Berta, and they hit the bed scene quite often with very hot love making. This film has many deep dark sides to this film and a very hard look into the minds of some very sick and troubled men and woman.
srm5
I saw this at a film festival and I could not believe how disastrous this film was. Starting with odd, but at least tolerable character sketches (the cop-protagonist spits out gritty lines that would make Jake Vittes blush). There is a brutal scene of violence that brings some of the horrors of the prejudice out. BUT THEN: the film stops caring at all about the prejudice. It never discusses the wheres or whys of how the boys came to these prejudices. Instead, it becomes a mealy-mouther family drama interspersed with shamefully awful euro-trash back beats. As I watched the movie implode in horror, the ending had the worst and most tacked-on cliche... people addressing the camera. To make matters worse, these were immigrants talking to the camera. I assume they never saw the movie, because they think that it had something to do with tolerance and prejudice... I am not clear on what this movie addressed other than ugly people in love scenes.
bay-3
It would be very helpfull for the sanity of this world that other filmakers could take the risk as the filmakers of this movie did. This it is one of the most honest and truthfull story I've ever saw in a big screen. Making movies it is a very risky business and they are not anymore much filmakers or that are open to risk their money in such a social strong contemporary critic, as this movie does and shows. I really congralulate the work they did in this movie, and I hardly recomende the audience to watch such an example of honesty and radical reality. The work of Imanol Arias it is esplendid, as all the young talent in the movie. Direction it radical and direct. Finally, I also want to mention that the script of this movie it is absolutely brilliant.