Anxo is a man that returns to his home village in the Galician countryside in Franco-era Spain after the war.Anxo is a man that returns to his home village in the Galician countryside in Franco-era Spain after the war.Anxo is a man that returns to his home village in the Galician countryside in Franco-era Spain after the war.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 10 nominations total
Manuel Pozas
- Henrique
- (as Manuel 'Pozas')
Marcos Javier Fernández Eimil
- Pasajero
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The first principle of a film is that it should have a semblance of a plot. A person does an action in a place. This falls down right away as a film. At minimum we must have some kind of story to tell. It'sa film, not a collection of pet photos. If you take the immaculate scenery they have found and took them and printed them and made "Galicia At Night" it would be a gorgeous photo book. But as a movie this offers nothing.
A hyper minimalist saunter through Franco-Spain in an unspecified time by unspecified people somehow stretches the 90 minutes runtime into a long tedious slog. Characters were never get the name of muse conversationally about a time we don't know about. Every shot feels 10-90 seconds too long and too lingering, as if the director knew the Arthouse crowd will eat up a 50 second closeup of a cow breathing. But films that dabbled in self-importance usually accompany their grandeur with more than Chiaroscuro visuals of a forest.
Hopefully some people will enjoy the visuals or be looking for a collection of short stories about life in Spain, but for me it was a real struggle. Will not be revisiting.
A hyper minimalist saunter through Franco-Spain in an unspecified time by unspecified people somehow stretches the 90 minutes runtime into a long tedious slog. Characters were never get the name of muse conversationally about a time we don't know about. Every shot feels 10-90 seconds too long and too lingering, as if the director knew the Arthouse crowd will eat up a 50 second closeup of a cow breathing. But films that dabbled in self-importance usually accompany their grandeur with more than Chiaroscuro visuals of a forest.
Hopefully some people will enjoy the visuals or be looking for a collection of short stories about life in Spain, but for me it was a real struggle. Will not be revisiting.
A stunning movie- visually, verbally and ideologically. It's like the cinematic aesthetic of Wes Anderson met the cinematic directing of Akira Kurosowa.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Endless Night
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $22,203
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
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