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Tristana

  • 1970
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Tristana (1970)
Trailer for Tristana
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
99+ Photos
Drama

Shortly after her mother's death, an innocent and youthful woman becomes the ward of a middle-aged nobleman who wants to control her.Shortly after her mother's death, an innocent and youthful woman becomes the ward of a middle-aged nobleman who wants to control her.Shortly after her mother's death, an innocent and youthful woman becomes the ward of a middle-aged nobleman who wants to control her.

  • Director
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Writers
    • Julio Alejandro
    • Luis Buñuel
    • Benito Pérez Galdós
  • Stars
    • Catherine Deneuve
    • Fernando Rey
    • Franco Nero
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Julio Alejandro
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Benito Pérez Galdós
    • Stars
      • Catherine Deneuve
      • Fernando Rey
      • Franco Nero
    • 40User reviews
    • 52Critic reviews
    • 93Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 11 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Tristana
    Trailer 1:34
    Tristana

    Photos109

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Catherine Deneuve
    Catherine Deneuve
    • Tristana
    Fernando Rey
    Fernando Rey
    • Don Lope
    Franco Nero
    Franco Nero
    • Horacio
    Lola Gaos
    Lola Gaos
    • Saturna
    Antonio Casas
    Antonio Casas
    • Don Cosme
    Jesús Fernández
    • Saturno
    Vicente Soler
    Vicente Soler
    • Don Ambrosio
    José Calvo
    • Campanero
    Fernando Cebrián
    Fernando Cebrián
    • Dr. Miquis
    Antonio Ferrandis
    Antonio Ferrandis
    • Comprador
    José María Caffarel
    José María Caffarel
    • Don Zenón
    Cándida Losada
    Cándida Losada
    • Ciudadana
    Joaquín Pamplona
    • Don Joaquín
    Mary Paz Pondal
    Mary Paz Pondal
    • Muchacha
    • (as María Paz Pondal)
    Juanjo Menéndez
    Juanjo Menéndez
    • Don Cándido
    • (as Juan José Menéndez)
    José Blanch
    • Comandante
    Alfredo Santacruz
      Sergio Mendizábal
      • Headmaster
      • Director
        • Luis Buñuel
      • Writers
        • Julio Alejandro
        • Luis Buñuel
        • Benito Pérez Galdós
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews40

      7.413.5K
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      Featured reviews

      nnad

      A Love/ Hate Movie.

      One of the better melodramas by Bunuel that stars Catherine Deneuve --Belle De Jour was the most successful. Tristana is the third installment to Bunuel's ill-fated heroine yarn: as we know, Viridiana and Belle De Jour were the first 2. Nevertheless, the film's not as surreal as these previous two films; however, Bunuel still maintains his use of dream sequences and familiar motifs. Rey is excellent as the lecherous uncle, and Deneuve is also good as the title character. Bunuel has definitely excelled in focusing on the aesthetic approach to a story-line; however, this respect can be overwhelming for some viewers, especially those who are more comfortable with the fast-paced American movies. In short, Tristana is still an excellent movie regardless of these unusual aspects.
      10Quinoa1984

      melodrama lifted up into perverse tragedy as only Bunuel can do

      It might appear to the uninitiated that Luis Bunuel is making with Tristana at first a good but very predictable melodrama that turns somewhere in the second half mark into a strange power-play of desire turned on its head. But in reality, when looking at it after seeing a couple of his films, Bunuel's work with Tristana is somehow kind of touching. He cares about all of his characters- none of whom what they seem or dumbed down to Lifetime movie levels- and in this stuck-in-its-ways society there are boundaries that are crossed in tragic means. Usually one might expect some dark or subtle comedy of manners or satire on society, but here it's stripped away, as it was for some of Viridiana, and all that's left is a spare, tense and expertly manipulated tale where the tables are turned once or twice on the couple of Don Lope (Fernando Rey) and Tristana (Catherine Deneauve, maybe her most physically demanding of her two Bunuel roles).

      One thing that's extraordinary about how Bunuel directs and allows for his actors to play the scenes is that the emotions are only heightened to a certain level, and never with the aid of things like music or tears. It is what it is: Don Lope has taken care of Tristana as her guardian since her mother died, and now has inserted himself as her father/husband figure, with his servant Saturna (stern-faced but understanding Lola Gaos) a kind of unofficial confessional. Tristana wants some freedom, just to go out and walk around, and feels caught by Don Lope even when not doing anything... until she meets Franco Nero's Don Horacio, a painter who could promise a new life. This goes without saying that one should take it for granted that Tristana isn't *that* young and could take care of herself without Lope, but maybe this is part of the point of the slight absurdity- and eventual tragedy- of this struggle.

      Two years go by after she leaves Lope for Horacio, with a tumor in her leg. She's now a cripple, and now once again a kind of mental prisoner in Lope's home; the complexity of old man Lope as being duplicitous is seen right after he finds out she's sick and Horacio asks for Lope to help keep her home, and he nearly skips home saying "she'll never leave again!" All of this, leading up to a final twist that is very satisfying if extending the tragic dimension of Lope and Tristana, would be soapy and tawdry and, possibly, very standard in other hands. For Bunuel, there's a lot of personal ground here; I wonder at times if Rey is a little like one of those actors a director of Bunuel's auteur-stature uses as a means of expressing himself through an actor, or if it's just because he's so good at playing wicked AND sympathetic bourgeois. And the mixture of ideas, if not really themes, covering what's love and over-control, religion, deformity, a free will are potent and exciting even in such subtle and (as Maltin said) serenely filmed territory.

      It's also a minor triumph for Deneuve, who between this and Belle de jour did some of her best work as an actress for the notorious surrealist. Her character's continual dream of Lope's beheaded top dangling from a church tower is the closest we see to a classic surrealist scene, though it's reminiscent of Los Olvidados as brilliantly expressing one character's mind-set. Deneuve is up for the challenge of putting up a tough interior and exterior presence; she gets paler towards the end (if this was for real or just a bad print I couldn't tell), and there's a lot of pain in her eyes and expression throughout. It's great work for one of the director's most subtly demanding works- beneath its conventional framework of a love-triangle story is sorrow and horror at the human condition.
      10colin-cooper

      Yet another Buñuel masterpiece.

      Luis Buñuel had a mastery of screen technique attained by very few directors. Confronted by the script of Tristana, what contemporary director would know where to start?

      Buñuel's attention to detail is extraordinary. Every scene is packed with visual interest. In some strange way, the decor forms an essential part of the structure; it is a facet of Buñuel's unique vision. Moreover, he not only knows exactly when to end a sequence, but how to end it. For instance, when Don Lope (Rey) puts down the dog and walks away, the camera follows not him but the dog: an endearing and brilliant touch, and there are many more. Compelling throughout, even spellbinding.

      If this film were a framed picture hanging in a gallery, thousands would come to see it and Buñuel would be acclaimed as a great artist. He was a great artist, in fact, but the cinema is an ephemeral form and people forget. We need to buy the videos and watch these fine movies from time to time, just to remind ourselves that a film can be a significant art form and not merely a commercial product cynically synthesised to extract the largest amount of money from the greatest number of people.
      9boltinghouc2

      Very Well-done Bunuel Film

      A cinematic masterpiece, Bunuel's Tristana works on many layers, and can be enjoyed at face-value, as a dark romance, or as a scathing social criticism of pre/post World War II Spain. The latter interpretation is rather difficult to digest with just one viewing, but its allegories of Tristana and Don Lope as fascism and socialism present a richly disguised history of the Spanish Civil War and Spain's constant struggle between the socialist and the fascist. As is typical of Bunuel's work, his characteristic criticism of the Church as well as bourgeoisie lifestyles also presents itself in Tristana, however not as markedly as in such features as L'Age D'Or or The Discreet Charm.
      rogierr

      mediocre, but not completely pointless

      Try this: 'Viridiana' meets 'Cet obscure objet du désir', but it is one of the least shocking, least surreal and least fascinating films by Buñuel. There are some brief illusional sequences and Deneuve is said to be the most expensive part of this film, but her performance doesn't reflect it. It is simply not convincing enough. Nevertheless it is a recognizable Buñuel concept in a subtle and accessible film. Cinematographer Jose F. Aguayo (Viridiana) did a fine job (in color) that looks like a step in the direction of the cinematography of Buñuel's last three films. No music as always for maximum sobriety. I don't especially want to recommend this, though I would like to see it again some day myself. If only to revive the great Fernando Rey (French Connection, Viridiana, The Immortal Story)...

      7/10

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Luis Buñuel said that many of Tristana's idiosyncrasies, including her habit of asking people to choose between nearly identical objects, was based on the director's sister's similar habits.
      • Quotes

        Don Lope: Poor workers. Cheated and then beaten. Work is a curse, Saturno. Down with work that you have to do to survive. That work isn't honorable, as some say. All it does is fatten the exploiting swine. However, what you do for pleasure ennobles man. If only we could all work like that. Look at me, I'd rather be hanged than work! So, I live poorly, but I live without working.

      • Alternate versions
        Originally released in Europe at 105 minutes.
      • Connections
        Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Multiplicity/The Frighteners/Kazaam/Fled/Celestial Clockwork (1996)
      • Soundtracks
        Étude No 12 in C minor, Op 10 'Revolutionary'
        Written by Frédéric Chopin

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      FAQ18

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • April 29, 1970 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Spain
        • Italy
        • France
      • Official site
        • Official site
      • Language
        • Spanish
      • Also known as
        • Mảnh Đời Của Tristana
      • Filming locations
        • Paseo Recaredo, Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain(opening and closing scenes with Saturna, Viridiana and the mute boy)
      • Production companies
        • Época Films
        • Talía Films
        • Selenia Cinematografica
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $14,586
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $4,754
        • Oct 14, 2012
      • Gross worldwide
        • $14,586
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 39m(99 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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