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L'Esprit de la ruche

Original title: El espíritu de la colmena
  • 1973
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Isabel Tellería and Ana Torrent in L'Esprit de la ruche (1973)
Watch Tráiler [OV]
Play trailer3:40
1 Video
84 Photos
Coming-of-AgeDark FantasyPsychological DramaSupernatural FantasyDramaFantasy

In 1940, after watching and being traumatized by the movie Frankenstein (1931), a sensitive seven-year-old girl living in a small Spanish village drifts into her own fantasy world.In 1940, after watching and being traumatized by the movie Frankenstein (1931), a sensitive seven-year-old girl living in a small Spanish village drifts into her own fantasy world.In 1940, after watching and being traumatized by the movie Frankenstein (1931), a sensitive seven-year-old girl living in a small Spanish village drifts into her own fantasy world.

  • Director
    • Víctor Erice
  • Writers
    • Ángel Fernández-Santos de Blázquez
    • Víctor Erice
  • Stars
    • Fernando Fernán Gómez
    • Teresa Gimpera
    • Ana Torrent
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Víctor Erice
    • Writers
      • Ángel Fernández-Santos de Blázquez
      • Víctor Erice
    • Stars
      • Fernando Fernán Gómez
      • Teresa Gimpera
      • Ana Torrent
    • 112User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Tráiler [OV]
    Trailer 3:40
    Tráiler [OV]

    Photos83

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    Top cast10

    Edit
    Fernando Fernán Gómez
    Fernando Fernán Gómez
    • Fernando
    Teresa Gimpera
    Teresa Gimpera
    • Teresa
    Ana Torrent
    Ana Torrent
    • Ana
    Isabel Tellería
    • Isabel
    Ketty de la Cámara
    • Milagros, la criada
    • (as Queti de la Cámara)
    Estanis González
    • Guardia civil
    José Villasante
    • Frankenstein
    Juan Margallo
    Juan Margallo
    • Fugitivo
    Laly Soldevila
    Laly Soldevila
    • Doña Lucía
    • (as Lali Soldevila)
    Miguel Picazo
    • Doctor
    • Director
      • Víctor Erice
    • Writers
      • Ángel Fernández-Santos de Blázquez
      • Víctor Erice
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews112

    7.722K
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    Featured reviews

    9RanchoTuVu

    gullible youth

    Erice's film about a young girl who sits through a screening of the l931 classic Frankenstein with her older sister moves slowly along but has some startling moments that unexpectedly bubble up. The girl (Ana Torrent) has a face that would melt anyone's heart and gives a terrific performance for a child (or anyone). The older sister (Isabel Telleria) also terrific, likes to lead her little sister along, and convinces her that Frankenstein exists in the here and now and can be easily found in an abandoned farm or by simply closing your eyes. The farm is a much more compelling setting and seeing the little girl alone there gives you the chills because you know one day someone might actually show up and while it probably won't be Frankenstein, it could be someone dangerous. Her inevitable disillusionment is dramatically presented when she runs away from her home. Her adventure takes the viewer along on a emotional ride especially when we see our little friend sitting down beside the toxic mushrooms that her father told her and her sister never to eat. Set in the seemingly endless Spanish countryside in 1940 and nicely filmed in color, it is a quiet little film with a big dramatic impact.
    7Lambysalamby

    Apparently voted one of the great Spanish films...

    As you can see on IMDb there is a lot of praise for this film. It is my understanding that it was voted within the third greatest Spanish films ever made. It's good but I wouldn't go that far..

    Many people here have mentioned the historical metaphors within the film but I won't delve into that, I thought the story was completely about the main character Ana.

    First off, the actress who played Ana was very authentic, with a striking face full of emotion. She genuinely believed a lot of what was happening in the film including the Frankenstein monster being real! Such authenticity means it's worth seeing it for that alone and that is where the films true beauty lies...

    For all this though, for what is essentially a beautifully shot film with great cinematography and performances, the film was a bit dull! It was only after the first 45 minutes or so that I started to wake up. There was a whole sub-plot between the parents marriage which I felt added little weight to the rest of the story.. There just wasn't a whole lot I felt I hadn't seen before.

    So for me, I can see the film for what it was worth and why it received such accolades. But it was a little too dull for me to consider it "Great"

    I recall one of my absolute favourite films ever The Fall, which also included a little girl who believed so much of the movie around her, that film was gripping from start to finish and never dull for a moment. Strange it hasn't gotten the praise it so deserved..
    10GiaLegs

    Ana Torrent, Ana Torrent and Ana Torrent.

    Has a child performer given as pure and brilliant a performance as Ana Torrent did in Victor Erice's allegorical masterpiece? This film has everything going for it; great performances, a honey hued atmosphere courtesy of Luis Cuadrado's genius as a cinematographer, and subtle, dreamy direction by Mr. Erice. I had often heard many works described as "dreams" in particular Bergman's works ("The Silence," "Hour of the Wolf"). As far as I'm concerned, this film ranks right beside the works of the master. It is an intense and involving work of art, which beckons us to look at a violent world, through the eyes of the children populating the screen. Many images stand out; among them the girls jumping over a fire and Ana sitting next to the "monster." This film should be seen by anyone who appreciates brilliant cinema. It will not dissapoint you, I guarantee.
    10semratoramanoglu

    the shadow of the monster on the water and Ana

    What I am most affected each time I see Erice's this movie is his ability to convey the world of a child to us sometimes even without depending on the dialogues. Instead, he prefers creating a beautiful atmosphere and feelings by using the faces, looks, the light and the silence.

    We can give an alternative name to this movie as "the spirit of the house", for the director tries to show what is going on in this house whose windows resemble to honeycombs. Erice deliberately chooses not to give any shots with all members of the family, as there is serious feeling of alienation between father and mother, and total lack of communication and affection between them, and from them towards their children. Under that situation the only person whom Ana could touch with her words, plays and questions is her sister Isabel. Their house looks like a beehive with the queen bee, male worker bee, and child bees performing their duties only by being in the same house without touching to each other.

    When Ana's best friend and her sister played on her trust and fears by deceiving her, she totally turned inward and found the image and the dream of Frankenstein ready for her friendship and to give her feeling of closeness. After she met the wounded Republican soldier, her Frankenstein's image came into being in his existence, who is considered as dangerous and outside the society by adults just like in the original Frankenstein movie. Like the girl in the latter, Ana does not see the fugitive as how adults define Frankenstein, as something to be run away from. Instead, she considers him as Frankenstein who could be her friend. I see the shadow of the "monster" on this movie used beautifully and magically by the director.

    During the 97 minutes of the movie, Erice and his cinematographer Luis Cuadrado both reflect the heart of a child to us with their magical scenes, and skillfully convey the grey feeling of the civil war in the background without straightforwardly pointing their fingers to it.
    8noralee

    The Magic of the Movies Through the Eyes of a Wide-Eyed Child

    "Spirit of the Beehive (El Espíritu de la colmena)" is a lovely insight into the mind of a child, where fantasy mixes with reality and stories with dreams. This is a beautiful metaphor for the magic of the movies and co-writer/director Víctor Erice illustrates the connection further by having the impact of the film "Frankenstein" with Boris Karloff on a young girl as the pivotal plot point.

    Ana Torrent is a wide-eyed innocent who carries the film, as we completely enter into how she integrates her daily life, both the quotidian happenings and the unusual, with scary stories her older sister teases her with and with the film. Her beautiful eyes are expressive and haunting. As someone who had an older sister with all kinds of outlandish tales that were gullibly believed, the sibling teasing is the most natural I've seen on film.

    Erice has a completely original take on the Frankenstein story, no matter how many times it has been referenced in other movies. "Ana" powerfully relates to the little girl in the film, even though she does not understand any of the darker emotions or outcomes. The film inspires her to seek out misfits and outcasts, with unintended consequences and impacts on the adult world.

    The adult world is the weakest part of the film, or it's so heavy with symbolism about the 1940's period when the film takes place or of the end of Francoism in Spain when the film was made that it's lost for a viewer first seeing the film today. While sometimes the parents', teachers' and servants' behavior seems mysterious if we were just seeing it from her perspective, their obliviousness and self-involvement in their own intellectual and romantic pursuits aren't really explained, even as her father's pompous hobby somehow gives the film its title. It might be some sort of commentary on how adults have their own way of blending fantasy and reality or some other political commentary.

    Seen in a new 35 MM print at NYC's Film Forum, the cinematography by Luis Cuadrado was stunning. The rural scenes of fields, forest and horizon --where dangers and threats always lurk beneath the pastoral--are beautiful, with simply gorgeous looking vignettes of childhood experiences.

    I wonder if this insightful look inside a child's mind influenced such films as "I'm Not Scared (Io non ho paura)" and "Paperhouse." but the film seems so fresh and creative I was surprised that it was made in 1973.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Cinematographer Luis Cuadrado was going blind at the time this film was made. An assistant would take Polaroids of the scenes and Cuadrado would direct the lighting by looking through a magnifying glass at these pictures. In 1980 Cuadrado committed suicide after he went completely blind and the tumor in his brain became too painful to face.
    • Goofs
      When the fugitive jumps from the train and rolls down the hill, he's wearing boots, but in the next shot he's wearing low-cut shoes.
    • Quotes

      Ana: [unable to sleep] Isabel?

      Isabel: [opening her eyes] What?

      Ana: [whispering] Tell me what you were going to tell me.

      Isabel: [whispering] About what?

      Ana: The movie.

      Isabel: Not now... Tomorrow.

      Ana: Now... You promised. Why did he kill the girl, and why did they kill him after that?... You don't know - you're a liar.

      Isabel: They didn't kill him, and he didn't kill the girl.

      Ana: How do you know? How do you know they didn't die?

      Isabel: Everything in the movies is fake. It's all a trick. Besides, I've seen him alive.

      Ana: Where?

      Isabel: In a place I know near the village. People can't see him. He only comes out at night.

      Ana: Is he a ghost?

      Isabel: No, he's a spirit.

      Isabel: Like the spirit Dona Lucia talks about?

      Isabel: Yes, but spirits have no bodies. That's why you can't kill them.

      Ana: But he had one in the movie. He had arms and feet. He had everything.

      Isabel: It's a disguise they put on when they go outside...

      Ana: If he only comes out at night, how can you talk to him?

      Isabel: I told you he was a spirit. If you're his friend, you can talk to him whenever you want. Just close your eyes and call him... It's me, Ana... It's me Ana...

      [they hear what sounds like ominous footsteps and are silent]

    • Connections
      Featured in Sus años dorados (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      Ojos verdes
      Written by Salvador Valverde (as Valverde), Rafael de León (as León) y Manuel L. Quiroga (as Quiroga)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Spirit of the Beehive?Powered by Alexa
    • The flute/piano music is beautiful. Can anyone tell me the composer or the name of the piece?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 5, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Spirit of the Beehive
    • Filming locations
      • Hoyuelos, Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain(Town and exteriors)
    • Production companies
      • Elías Querejeta Producciones Cinematográficas
      • Jacel Desposito
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $190,734
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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