IMDb RATING
7.7/10
3K
YOUR RATING
A group of tenants living in an old house are confronted with having to move out due to a renovation project the city has undertaken, but decide to unite and come up with a strategy.A group of tenants living in an old house are confronted with having to move out due to a renovation project the city has undertaken, but decide to unite and come up with a strategy.A group of tenants living in an old house are confronted with having to move out due to a renovation project the city has undertaken, but decide to unite and come up with a strategy.
- Awards
- 12 wins & 3 nominations total
Featured reviews
La estrategia del caracol is a precious tale, like one of those G.G. Marquez usually writes. There is a kind of magic realism on it, so we see a world that is not exactly as the real one, but is quite similar. The whole film, in my opinion, is a metaforic view of the society, represented by the house. The people living there have to learn to live altogether, despite their differences, and fight together to face a great danger: The destruction of their home.
After using as many legal tricks as possible, there is only one solution, proposed by a former Spanish civil war fighter. But this solution means work, and everybody must work with his neighbours, doing as much as possible and receiving everything needed in exchange. During the work, they act as a team, as a real society; and some anarchist little dreams can come true, although, as Jacinto (the Spanish exiliate)says "it´s autumn in Spain". Nowadays, I´m afraid it´s already winter.
After using as many legal tricks as possible, there is only one solution, proposed by a former Spanish civil war fighter. But this solution means work, and everybody must work with his neighbours, doing as much as possible and receiving everything needed in exchange. During the work, they act as a team, as a real society; and some anarchist little dreams can come true, although, as Jacinto (the Spanish exiliate)says "it´s autumn in Spain". Nowadays, I´m afraid it´s already winter.
This movie is one of the greatest in Colombian history, a true masterpiece!!! Not only is Sergio Cabrera a very resourceful director, but he is surrounded by a great cast of actors that include Fausto Cabrera, Víctor Mallarino and Florina Lemaitre. The story is fast-paced and hilarious, but at the same time it is dramatic and shows our reality. Bravo for this movie!!!
An excellent movie with a realistic magical story and great humor. It could well be the representation of a Gabriel Garcia Marquez story. I really recommend watching this movie. Sergio Cabrera does ana amazing job directing it and the cast is very good.
'La estrategia del caracol' had an unexpected success in Colombia. The movie was on release at the end of december of 1994 and, suddenly, like a miracle, the film connected with the viewers, the critics and collected some money, something unusual in that country where Hollywood rubbish-films are box-office kings (sadly). Certainly, Cabrera's creation deserved that incredible viewer's support. His movie is a good polaroid of colombian people and their way of living. It shows us the efforts of a group of 'neighbours' trying to keep the only thing that they have got in their lives: their house, something that belongs to them but, legally, doesn't. They will have to work together, despite they don't like each other, in order to solve that problem. And they, as usually colombians do, will find a creative solution to keep that precious 'treasure'. That's what I think the movie is about. By using the intelligence, cooperation and a good dose of sacarsm poor people can defeat the rich-powerful guys. In this case, this modest colombian film defeated the Hollywood empire for several weeks. Of course the dream was so short...!
FIRST: Let us FOCUS on the Titles's Content and Context....´
As to whether or not CARACOL is the BEST Colombian film ever made is certainly open to debate. But that it is, undoubtedly, far and away my personal favorite is not!
It's probably safe to say that many countries celebrate their regional and class cultural differences. Colombia obsesses over them! If you are relatively unfamiliar with said differences...there is no better way to introduce yourself than via this delicious example of late 20th Century Colombian film-making (1993).
CARACOL is an unrivaled showcase for Colombian talent. Sergio Cabrera directs, masterfully, and also doubles as script-writer. OMG what a superb and nuanced work he has crafted! Those of you who speak fluent Spanish will, undoubtedly, be able to savor the semantic texture and subtleties Cabrera applies so skillfully!
If ever there were a film tailor-made for "Lost in Translation".... I'm sure ESTRATEGIA is it! (To be honest, I have seen it a number of times in its original Spanish, so this is a supposition on my part, but I'm absolutely certain CARACOL does not lend itself, in the least, to Translation!)
There is an underlying Universal theme, which people from every country on earth, who have ever felt the overwhelming sense of frustration and impotence that is an inevitable byproduct of battling a lethargic, glacier-paced Bureaucracy, certainly can identify with! Undoubtedly, almost all of us have experienced moments such as these in our lives!
The cast is composed of some of the very best Colombia had to offer in the 1990's, so much so, that looking through the cast credits is pretty much a "Who's Who" of Colombian acting talent! Fausto Cabrera, Sergio's father, was born in Spain and was 71 when CARACOL was shot. Frank Ramirez, (Condores No Entierran Todos los Dias/A Man of Principle) has also appeared in a few American TV Series; Vicki Hernandez, practically a household name in Colombia, had a small role in PROOF OF LIFE (2000).
So as to not cross the "Spoiler" threshold, let me just say that the final scene has one of the greatest tag lines/Punch lines I have ever seen in any film in Spanish. Sadly, it is hard for me to envision any possible translation that would have the same impact on English speaking viewers.... But Please don't let this stop you from getting your hands on a copy for viewing! CARACOL is a real "Must See" for all Citizens of the WORLD!!!
10***** Bureaucracy ladened hurdles STARS*****
....ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA!
Any comments, questions or observations, in English o en Español, are most welcome!...
As to whether or not CARACOL is the BEST Colombian film ever made is certainly open to debate. But that it is, undoubtedly, far and away my personal favorite is not!
It's probably safe to say that many countries celebrate their regional and class cultural differences. Colombia obsesses over them! If you are relatively unfamiliar with said differences...there is no better way to introduce yourself than via this delicious example of late 20th Century Colombian film-making (1993).
CARACOL is an unrivaled showcase for Colombian talent. Sergio Cabrera directs, masterfully, and also doubles as script-writer. OMG what a superb and nuanced work he has crafted! Those of you who speak fluent Spanish will, undoubtedly, be able to savor the semantic texture and subtleties Cabrera applies so skillfully!
If ever there were a film tailor-made for "Lost in Translation".... I'm sure ESTRATEGIA is it! (To be honest, I have seen it a number of times in its original Spanish, so this is a supposition on my part, but I'm absolutely certain CARACOL does not lend itself, in the least, to Translation!)
There is an underlying Universal theme, which people from every country on earth, who have ever felt the overwhelming sense of frustration and impotence that is an inevitable byproduct of battling a lethargic, glacier-paced Bureaucracy, certainly can identify with! Undoubtedly, almost all of us have experienced moments such as these in our lives!
The cast is composed of some of the very best Colombia had to offer in the 1990's, so much so, that looking through the cast credits is pretty much a "Who's Who" of Colombian acting talent! Fausto Cabrera, Sergio's father, was born in Spain and was 71 when CARACOL was shot. Frank Ramirez, (Condores No Entierran Todos los Dias/A Man of Principle) has also appeared in a few American TV Series; Vicki Hernandez, practically a household name in Colombia, had a small role in PROOF OF LIFE (2000).
So as to not cross the "Spoiler" threshold, let me just say that the final scene has one of the greatest tag lines/Punch lines I have ever seen in any film in Spanish. Sadly, it is hard for me to envision any possible translation that would have the same impact on English speaking viewers.... But Please don't let this stop you from getting your hands on a copy for viewing! CARACOL is a real "Must See" for all Citizens of the WORLD!!!
10***** Bureaucracy ladened hurdles STARS*****
....ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA!
Any comments, questions or observations, in English o en Español, are most welcome!...
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough Jimeno had envisioned the movie several years before it was screenwriter and actor Humberto Dorado who finally shaped it into a dense 400 pages screenplay, that eventually became the original screenplay and a blueprint for the film. Later after the majority of it was filmed, screenwriter Jorge Goldenberg came as an editing consultant and restructured the film, but it was not only until Nobel Prize Gabriel García Márquez saw the pilot of the film and encouraged Sergio Cabrera to continue with the making of the film. Because of budget problems and the lack of support of the Colombian government the film took four years to be fully completed . In fact by the time the Colombian government was actually shutting down the cultural organizations that supported filmmakers such as Focine.
- Quotes
Doctor Holguín, the house owner: [Reading the words on the wall, after that the front of the house falls] "Here's your fucking painted house."
- ConnectionsReferenced in Pastewka: Die Strategie der Schnecke (2006)
- How long is La estrategia del caracol?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 56m(116 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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