Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Marshland (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2014 Spanish film
Marshland
Theatrical release poster
SpanishLa isla mínima
Directed byAlberto Rodríguez
Screenplay by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyAlex Catalán
Edited byJosé M. G. Moyano
Music byJulio de la Rosa
Production
companies
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release dates
  • 20 September 2014 (2014-09-20) (Zinemaldia)
  • 26 September 2014 (2014-09-26) (Spain)
Running time
105 minutes[1]
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish
Budget€4 million
Box office$8.9 million[2]

Marshland (Spanish:La isla mínima,transl. 'The Tiny Island') is a 2014 Spanishthriller film directed byAlberto Rodríguez which starsJavier Gutiérrez andRaúl Arévalo. The film was presented at the 62ndSan Sebastián International Film Festival on 20 September 2014.[3] It swept the29th Goya Awards, winning ten categories, includingBest Film,Director,Original Screenplay, andLeading Actor (Gutiérrez).

Plot

[edit]

In 1980,Madrid homicide detectives Pedro Suárez and Juan Robles are sent to a "backwater" town on theGuadalquivir Marshes in Spain's "Deep South" to investigate the disappearance of two teenage sisters (Carmen and Estrella) during the town's festivities. Pedro, openly critical of Spain's past duringthe Francoist Dictatorship, has a problem with authority figures, while Juan seems not to care, though he has a troubled past of his own.

The detectives meet with the girls' father, Rodrigo, a local riverboat skipper. Although Rodrigo and his wife Rocío say that their daughters were average girls, the duo hear from the local police that they were known for their promiscuity, and from their friends that they had a deep urge to leave the town. Rocío also gives the detectives a burntfilm reel she has found, depicting the girls naked and in bed with a man whose face is obscured by aflash. Soon enough, both Carmen and Estrella are found dead and dumped in the local marsh, having been raped and tortured to death.

Troubled and with no leads, the two detectives attempt to spy on Quini, the handsome and suave former boyfriend of Carmen. Quini, now dating another town girl, Marina, manages to sneak up on the detectives after they have followed him and attempts to threaten them with a knife. After disarming and sending him away, the two agree that Quini must be part of whatever is occurring. The problem proves to be even bigger after a drunk man named Castro tells the detectives about a similar case: his girlfriend, Beatriz, was close to Quini and the sisters, and was found dismembered in the marshes, her suitcase floating there.

Pedro and Juan continue to investigate, gradually unravelling secrets. It is revealed that the riverboats and marshes are being used to smuggle and transportheroin, and that Rodrigo had stolen akilo and sold it, getting him in trouble with the locals. However, the locals involved in the drugs seek out the detectives, revealing their participation in drug smuggling in full but claiming they had nothing to do with the sisters' deaths. One of the men does aid the investigation, however, by describing a whiteDyane 6 he saw at the church where one of the girls' purse was found. After digging through more victims' items, the two see a pattern of out-of-town jobbrochures for women, eventually linking Quini to a man named Sebastián. Digging through Sebastián's past, they find awarrant out for him for the possible sexual molestation of a child, solidifying his chance of being the main culprit. Juan and Pedro deduce that Quini and Sebastián were luring the young women of the town, who were aching to leave and find their own independence through work, by passing these brochures around and then entrapping them into sexual slavery at a localhunting lodge.

Waters grow murky, however, when Pedro becomes aware of Juan's past shooting of a girl at a protest during the Franco Era. Pedro is also angered after a possible third culprit, a local factory owner named Alfonso Corrales, is brushed over, most likely due to complexpolitical ties. The two continue on, though, eventually deducing Sebastián's cover as the watchman of the hunting lodge. Pedro attempts to follow and observe Sebastián's white Dyane 6, but loses him. With the help of a localpoacher named Jesús, the trio finally chases Sebastián into the marshes. All three are shot by the sniping Sebastián, though as he is about to slay Pedro, Juan is able to sneak up and stab him, which he does repeatedly, in a state. After Sebastián falls dead into the swamp, Juan opens the trunk of the car to rescue a bruised but still alive Marina.

The town is brought peace after the case is solved, as well as by the local worker's union accepting a pay raise (which in principle, they felt was too low). All seems well for the detectives, too, as Pedro sees a promotion and relocation closer to his own home and wife. On the final night of their stay, however, Pedro receives photographs from a journalist who has helped on the case. Though Juan justified his shooting story by saying it was his former partner's actions, the journalist reveals that he had in fact been a brutal officer inFranco's notorious secret police, and to have once been known as "The Crow".

In the morning, before they drive home, Juan asks a stoney-faced Pedro if they "are good". Pedro does not answer, and the two ride off to an uncertain future.

Cast

[edit]

Critical reception

[edit]

The film received mostly positive reviews. It has a critic approval rating of 92% on thereview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 7.72/10, based on 36 reviews. The website's critics consensus reads: "As narratively taut as it is richly atmospheric,Marshland keeps viewers guessing throughout a procedural thriller with surprising nuance."[1] Critics have hailedMarshland as one of the best Spanish films of 2014, and have defined it as a suffocating cop thriller with a subtle sociopolitical subplot.[4] They have also pointed out reminiscences of American seriesTrue Detective in the star power of the main actors and the environment of the film, although the film began to be recorded before the series' release.[5] Jay Weissberg ofVariety deemed the film to be "a satisfyingly atmospheric neo-noir", even if it ultimately disappoints in its denouement, leaving many questions unanswered.[6]

Accolades

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
201462ndSan Sebastián International Film FestivalGolden Shell for Best FilmNominated[7]
Silver Shell for Best ActorJavier GutiérrezWon
Jury Prize for Best CinematographyÁlex CatalánWon
Feroz Zinemaldia AwardWon
201520th Forqué AwardsBest Fiction PictureWon[8]
Best ActorJavier GutiérrezWon
Raúl ArévaloNominated
2nd Feroz AwardsBest DramaWon[9][10]
Best DirectorAlberto RodríguezWon
Best ScreenplayAlberto Rodríguez & Rafael CobosNominated
Best Main Actor in a FilmRaúl ArévaloNominated
Javier GutiérrezWon
Best Supporting Actor in a FilmAntonio de la TorreNominated
Best Supporting Actress in a FilmNerea BarrosNominated
Best Original SoundtrackJulio de la RosaWon
Best TrailerWon
Best Film PosterNominated
29th Goya AwardsBest FilmWon[11]
Best DirectorAlberto RodríguezWon
Best Original ScreenplayRafael Cobos and Alberto RodríguezWon
Best Main ActorRaúl ArévaloNominated
Javier GutiérrezWon
Best Supporting ActorAntonio de la TorreNominated
Best Supporting ActressMercedes LeónNominated
Best New ActressNerea BarrosWon
Best Original ScoreJulio de la RosaWon
Best CinematographyÁlex CatalánWon
Best EditingJosé M. G. MoyanoWon
Best Production SupervisionManuela OcónNominated
Best Art DirectionPepe DomínguezWon
Best Costume DesignFernando GarcíaWon
Best Makeup and HairstylesYolanda PiñaNominated
Best SoundDaniel de Zayas, Nacho Royo-Villanova and Pelayo GutiérrezNominated
Best Special EffectsPedro Moreno and Juan VenturaNominated
24th Actors and Actresses Union AwardsBest Film Actor in a Leading RoleJavier GutiérrezWon[12][13]
Raúl ArévaloNominated
Best Film Actress in a Minor RoleMercedes LeónWon
Best Film Actor in a Minor RoleManolo SoloWon
Antonio de la TorreNominated
57th Ariel AwardsBest Ibero-American FilmNominated[14]
2nd Platino AwardsBest Ibero-American FilmNominated[15]
Neox Fan Awards 2015Best Spanish filmFinalist[16]
28th European Film AwardsEuropean Film Academy People's Choice Award for Best European FilmWon[17]

See also

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Marshland (La isla mínima) (2014)".Rotten Tomatoes.Fandango Media. RetrievedMarch 5, 2018.
  2. ^"Marshland".
  3. ^"'La Isla Mínima' abre la sección oficial del Festival de cine de San Sebastián arropada por las críticas".Antena 3. 20 September 2014.
  4. ^Pazos, Pablo (26 September 2014).""La isla mínima": llega la mejor película española del año".HoyCinema (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved18 December 2014.
  5. ^Rodríguez Marchante, Oti (26 September 2014)."Una intriga seca en un mundo húmedo".HoyCinema (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2014. Retrieved18 December 2014.
  6. ^Weissberg, Jay (28 September 2014)."San Sebastian Film Review: 'Marshland'".Variety.
  7. ^"Palmarés de la 62 edición del Festival de San Sebastián".Festival de San Sebastián (in Spanish). 27 September 2014. Retrieved17 December 2014.
  8. ^Morales Fernández, Clara (12 January 2015)."Los Premios Forqué coronan a 'La isla mínima'".El País.
  9. ^"Lista de nominados a los Premios Feroz 2015".Premios Feroz (in Spanish). 17 December 2014. Archived fromthe original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved16 December 2014.
  10. ^"Premios Feroz 2015: Lista de ganadores".Cinemanía. 26 January 2015 – via20minutos.es.
  11. ^"La isla maxima [sic]".Premios Goya (in Spanish). January 2016. Retrieved8 January 2014.
  12. ^"Nominaciones a los Premios de la Unión de Actores".Fotogramas. 10 February 2015.
  13. ^"'La Isla Mínima' también triunfa en los premios Unión de Actores".Fotogramas. 10 March 2015.
  14. ^"Lista de ganadores del Ariel 2015".Milenio. 27 May 2015.
  15. ^Rodera, Alejandro (19 July 2015)."'Relatos salvajes' arrasa en los Premios Platino 2015 con ocho galardones".ecartelera.
  16. ^neox-fan-awards-2015Archived September 1, 2015, at theWayback Machine
  17. ^"European Film Awards Winners 2015: Paolo Sorrentino's 'Youth' Scoops Best Film, Director & Actor For Michael Caine".Deadline. 12 December 2015.

External links

[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marshland_(film)&oldid=1315616946"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp