After finding out that North American people are visiting the Spanish villages, the citizens of Villar del Río start preparing themselves to welcome them when they arrive.After finding out that North American people are visiting the Spanish villages, the citizens of Villar del Río start preparing themselves to welcome them when they arrive.After finding out that North American people are visiting the Spanish villages, the citizens of Villar del Río start preparing themselves to welcome them when they arrive.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 1 nomination
- Boticario
- (as Nicolás Perchicot)
- Pedro
- (as Angel Alvarez)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaVoted fifth best Spanish film by professionals and critics in 1996 Spanish cinema centenary.
- GoofsWhen Juan runs to the tractor during the dream sequence, the plywood resting over the back of the tractor falls to the ground. When Juan and his family board the tractor, the plywood is back against the back of the tractor and it falls again.
- Quotes
Don Pablo, el alcalde: Dear citizens of Villar del Río: as your mayor, I owe you an explanation, and I'm going to give you this explanation that I owe you, because as your mayor, I owe you an explanation, and I'm going to give you this explanation that I owe you, because as your mayor...
- ConnectionsFeatured in Songs for After a War (1976)
- SoundtracksTío páseme el río
Music by Juan Solano (as Maestro Solano)
Lyrics by José Antonio Ochaíta and Xandro Valerio
Performed by Lolita Sevilla
the best parts of this movie are the humour. it's witty and interesting, plus the dialogues are fast paced and good to follow. most of the characters are archetypes true but there's historical views present here: spain opening up to the world (more or less) and the american friends visiting - a small town no one from outside cares about, heck no one in spain cares about. their naiveness on thinking everything will be solves by one single visit. people wanting to take advantage of that to earn more money.
it's funny because when i stared watching this i aleady knew its way: these characters are also common in portugal. The dynamics of the village are pretty much the same. having a narrator is an interesting portrait because we se this kinda as a tale, and not exactly as a hugely realistic narrative - even though some of the stuff is. i have a favourite gag, at the line of "wishes americans will provided" but i won't spoil it.
also the dream sequences were very interesting. the discussions about morality, because if ones are all interested in "opening up" others fear their power will fade - even if it faded already. the ideia that inferiority reigns in those villages against the very developed (and a bit depraved for some) americans, and some of the actions they took to please the outsiders make a strong point: a huge complex of inferiority towards them, masked by patriotism and alleged pride. in a way is what a lot of repressive regimes are: a mask to please the leader and the others. the truth is when everything goes back to normal, and the political agents don't care about them anyway.
it's a very good movie, for me inbetween a 7 and an 8. but it seems a fun and accurate historical (and real even it it's told as a tale) portrait about small towns in south european countries. i hope more people see this because it definitely deserves.
- quaseprovisorio
- Jun 7, 2020
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Dobro došli, gospodine Marshall
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- ESP 2,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1