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EL
MAR
As children during the Spanish Civil War, Andreu Ramallo, Manuel Tur and
their friend Francisca already live in a world of political assassinations
and a resultant atmosphere of hatred and suspicion between adults and
children. On one decisive day, their lives are irrevocably affected when
they witness the vengeful slaying of one child by another, provoked by adult
political intrigue. The tragedy marks the children, who silently carry the
secret into their adulthood.
Years later, the three meet again as young adults, again in dire
circumstances. Ramallo and Manuel have both been admitted to a hospital for
the care of tuberculosis. They find Francisca there, now a nun working as a
hospital nurse for the afflicted patients, many of them gravely ill.
Having so far averted the worst ravages of this epidemic, Ramallo and Manuel
face other torments in their close quarters. Ramallo, who has spent many of
his growing years as an underground assistant and sometime sex partner to a middle-aged
drug runner, chafes under the attentions of the callous older man, even now in
the hospital, and seeks release from this exploitative
relationship. Sensitive Manuel has sought solace from past and present
horrors in an intense, religious devotion that subsumes his repressed sexual
desires, especially those he furtively harbors for his old friend, Ramallo.
Only Francisca knows the darkest secrets her friends harbor, and only to God
can she confess these. With a shared, desperate desire to outrun the
hazards and sorrows of their young lives, the three protagonists turn their
eyes and their efforts toward anything that seemingly offers deliverance,
setting up moments of lyrical tenderness and collisions of cataclysmic
impact.
Director Agustin Villaronga authentically invests this strange, beautiful
story with an edgy intensity, such as only isolated, hungry souls know.
Featuring enthralling performances, and superbly atmospheric cinematography
and sound, the film compellingly evokes that sense of a bright horizon
somewhere offscreen, which keeps its characters looking upward in hope.
Directed by Agustîn Villaronga
107 min. / in Catalan

Optional
English or Spanish subtitles
5.1
Dolby surround sound
16:9
widescreen
Coming
attractions
Scene
selections

"A beautifully constructed work, brimming with imagery that haunts the mind
for days afterwards."
THE SPINNING IMAGE
“Eye-catching, bravura camerawork and editing!”
TIMEOUT
“Casamajor is mesmerizing as the cocksure Ramallo who thinks
of little other than his own self-interest, and Bergonzini is
similarly entrancing as the devout Manuel.”
J.P., METRO WEEKLY (Washington D.C.)
"The male leads inhabit their roles with complete conviction. The steely
photography of Jaume Peracaula and the eerie music score by Javier Navarrete
are among the film's major accomplishments."
David Stratton, VARIETY
"Impressive. Classy."
Michael Thomson, BBC
Manfred
Salzgeber Award & Golden Bear Nominee
Berlin Film Festival
Spain
Academy Awards
Nominee Best Cinematography and Best New Actress
Berlin
Film Festival
San
Francisco Gay & Lesbian Film Festival
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