El 7º día
- 2004
- 1h 36min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
1541
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn an isolated village in Extremadura (Spain), the Jiménez and Fuentes families have a violent history of land disputes, jealousy, envy, and violence.In an isolated village in Extremadura (Spain), the Jiménez and Fuentes families have a violent history of land disputes, jealousy, envy, and violence.In an isolated village in Extremadura (Spain), the Jiménez and Fuentes families have a violent history of land disputes, jealousy, envy, and violence.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 14 candidature totali
Eulàlia Ramon
- Carmen
- (as Eulalia Ramón)
Ramon Fontserè
- Jerónimo
- (as Ramón Fontseré)
Recensioni in evidenza
Yes, I praise this film highly. Is it a masterpiece? Nope. The acting (minus the death scenes) were top notch, the cinematography of the wide southern Spain frontier was to die for, and Spanish guitar music score was top of the line. I thought the pacing was a tad too sluggish in a few areas, but then, that's probably what the director wanted us to feel - life moves slowly in remote farming villages. Worth watching if you have nothing else on tap.
Carlos Saura has been one of our finest directors for almost five decades, and, after a bunch of irregular films in the nineties, returns in top form with "El séptimo día". Based on the tragic true events happening in 1992 in Spain, the film captures the essence of the maddening atmosphere that gave way to the slaughter of Puerto Hurraco.
In Spain there is little tradition of portraying real-life events in film. Writers Loriga and Saura were actually heavily criticized by some, as if their film would bring back the painful memories that most people had chosen to forget. However, their film portrays the slaughter and the events that led to it with gusto and with no sign of sensationalism.
In fact, a great part of the film is devoted to depict the summer romance of a young girl (Yohana Cobo, what a discovery) and a lifeguard (Oriol Vila, another breakthrough). Thus, the murderers (outstanding Juan Diego, José Luis Gómez, Victoria Abril and Ana Wagener) are relegated to a secondary subplot for almost half of the film.
Saura managed to assemble one of the greatest casts of the last few years. Apart from the aforementioned, José García, Eulalia Ramón, Carlos Hipólito and, in bit parts, Elia Galera, Juan Sanz and Carlos Kaniowski are worth mentioning for their excellent work in "El séptimo día".
The best: the cast and the good taste in filming a real-life tragedy. The worst: that some people criticized it before they had even seen it. They should not forget that we are bound to repeat our history if we choose to forget it.
In Spain there is little tradition of portraying real-life events in film. Writers Loriga and Saura were actually heavily criticized by some, as if their film would bring back the painful memories that most people had chosen to forget. However, their film portrays the slaughter and the events that led to it with gusto and with no sign of sensationalism.
In fact, a great part of the film is devoted to depict the summer romance of a young girl (Yohana Cobo, what a discovery) and a lifeguard (Oriol Vila, another breakthrough). Thus, the murderers (outstanding Juan Diego, José Luis Gómez, Victoria Abril and Ana Wagener) are relegated to a secondary subplot for almost half of the film.
Saura managed to assemble one of the greatest casts of the last few years. Apart from the aforementioned, José García, Eulalia Ramón, Carlos Hipólito and, in bit parts, Elia Galera, Juan Sanz and Carlos Kaniowski are worth mentioning for their excellent work in "El séptimo día".
The best: the cast and the good taste in filming a real-life tragedy. The worst: that some people criticized it before they had even seen it. They should not forget that we are bound to repeat our history if we choose to forget it.
I love "La caza" (1965), and "Deprisa deprisa" (1980), both winners of the Berlin Silver Bear. I also did like, in a lesser degree, "Los golfos" (1959) and "Ana y los lobos" (1972). But this?... If it had been directed by someone else, fine. But Saura?... I still remember the real events back in 1990 which were the basis for this film. I was 17 at the time, and it made front pages for days: la Espana profunda (deep old Spain) with its feud crimes and revenges, hot blood genes, anger, jealousy, a hot climate to help things boil up... you name it. It's the Latin character all right. In the deep Extremadura countryside two brothers armed with shotguns one day walked into the village and began firing shots at random, sparing absolutely no one. Men, women, children... they all fell dead under the barrage. That night the whole of Spain was in total shock: what was the cause for this senseless slaughter? What was the motive?... Only the two killers had the answer. I watched this recreation of the events last night for the first time. It looks like a film that could have just been made by anyone: documentary style with modern trendy camera pans, too many close-ups, a sepia-like visual texture... just MTV video-like. Absolutely awful. And to be honest, the good characters are so irritating, such pain-in-the-arse morons that I feel more sympathy for the killers instead. Those three young girls are so ****** ANNOYING!! The two killers almost have an excuse to want to wipe them out of the map, really.
A Spanish Western movie!
Carlos Saura is as great in this movie as ever. This movie becomes more interesting when we realize that this movie is based on a true story.
I feel scared when I think this really happened in the real world.
I have seen many movies and stories that show the villagers very kindly. But it can be said that this is completely wrong. People from small villages seem to have more complex relationships than urban communities. And life among them can not be enjoyable.
The extreme violence of the film's characters contrasts with the beautiful nature of the village.
As beautiful and peaceful as the village is, the characters in the film are never peaceful. They can kill each other brutally and go on with their normal lives. The soundtrack of this movie is very beautiful. Carlos Saura is very interested in using singing in his films. I highly recommend this movie. My rating for this movie is 9 out of 10.
Carlos Saura is as great in this movie as ever. This movie becomes more interesting when we realize that this movie is based on a true story.
I feel scared when I think this really happened in the real world.
I have seen many movies and stories that show the villagers very kindly. But it can be said that this is completely wrong. People from small villages seem to have more complex relationships than urban communities. And life among them can not be enjoyable.
The extreme violence of the film's characters contrasts with the beautiful nature of the village.
As beautiful and peaceful as the village is, the characters in the film are never peaceful. They can kill each other brutally and go on with their normal lives. The soundtrack of this movie is very beautiful. Carlos Saura is very interested in using singing in his films. I highly recommend this movie. My rating for this movie is 9 out of 10.
Carlos Saura brings back to life one of the darkest chapters of Spanish recent history. Jelousy, envy, fights for lands, and a bloody ending. "Underground" Spanish writer Ray Loriga surprises us all making a nice and sober script in which he tells us about what happened in the village of Puerto Urraco one summer of the early 90's. As usual, Saura has chosen a great cast. Maybe Juan Diego and José Luis Gfómez are not the youngest or the more handsome actors in the world, maybe they're not even the most popular, but they are just brilliant. Victoria Abril is in state of grace, and the way she built her character is just amazing. The Seventh day, the Sunday, hatred blew nine lives away, and Saura shows it as it was.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBased on a true story, the killings of Puerto Hurraco, which happened in Spain in 1990.
- BlooperThe sisters dance to "Una rosa es una rosa" by Mecano. That song was released in 1991, the true killing in which the film is based happened in 1990.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The 7th Day
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 2.600.000 € (previsto)
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 214 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 36 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was El 7º día (2004) officially released in Canada in English?
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