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El Sur

Original title: El sur
  • 1983
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
6.9K
YOUR RATING
El Sur (1983)
Coming-of-AgeTragic RomanceDramaMysteryRomance

A woman reflects on her childhood relationship with her father, attempting to understand the depths of his despair and the truth of his myths.A woman reflects on her childhood relationship with her father, attempting to understand the depths of his despair and the truth of his myths.A woman reflects on her childhood relationship with her father, attempting to understand the depths of his despair and the truth of his myths.

  • Director
    • Víctor Erice
  • Writers
    • Víctor Erice
    • Adelaida García Morales
  • Stars
    • Omero Antonutti
    • Sonsoles Aranguren
    • Icíar Bollaín
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    6.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Víctor Erice
    • Writers
      • Víctor Erice
      • Adelaida García Morales
    • Stars
      • Omero Antonutti
      • Sonsoles Aranguren
      • Icíar Bollaín
    • 31User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos63

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    Top cast15

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    Omero Antonutti
    Omero Antonutti
    • Agustín Arenas
    Sonsoles Aranguren
    Sonsoles Aranguren
    • Estrella - 8 años
    Icíar Bollaín
    Icíar Bollaín
    • Estrella - 15 años
    Lola Cardona
    Lola Cardona
    • Julia
    Rafaela Aparicio
    Rafaela Aparicio
    • Milagros
    Aurore Clément
    Aurore Clément
    • Irene Ríos
    • (as Aurora Clement)
    • …
    Maria Caro
    • Casilda
    Francisco Merino
    Francisco Merino
    • Enamorado
    José Vivó
    • Camarero
    Germaine Montero
    Germaine Montero
    • Doña Rosario
    María Massip
    • Estrella adulta
    • (voice)
    José Luis Fernández 'Pirri'
    José Luis Fernández 'Pirri'
    • Carioco
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    José García García Morilla
    • Chófer
    • (uncredited)
    Chus Lampreave
    Chus Lampreave
    • Casilda
    • (uncredited)
    Jesús Nieto
    • Agustín Arenas- voz
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Víctor Erice
    • Writers
      • Víctor Erice
      • Adelaida García Morales
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    7.86.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10zetes

    A masterpiece

    I don't really keep a list of most-wanted-but-unavailable movies, but, if I did, this film, the second of only three features of Victor Erice, director of Spirit of the Beehive, would have been very high on it. It is, to understate, far from a disappointment. Very much a sister film to Spirit, it's about a woman, Estrella, who as a narrator remains off screen, reminiscing about her relationship with her father (Omero Antonutti). As a child (where she is played by Sonsoles Aranguren), she worshiped the man. Behind the perceived god, though, he was quite a sad man, haunted by history. Estrella discovers a particular secret which dominates the man's mind. In her teenage years (where she's played by Iciar Bollain), that secret comes back. This is an achingly gorgeous film, very quiet and largely shot in shadowy, cold sunlight. The images are every bit as gorgeous as Spirit's, and the story is, too. Criterion apparently owns the rights to this. Many of the films that are only streaming on Hulu will never see a home video release, but they really should put this one out there. It's a masterpiece.
    9puteolum

    Just a little info

    There's no doubt that Erice is one of the best Spanish directors ever, and each film he's made is an absolute masterpiece. I shall not comment anything about the plot, the acting, not even about cinematography. I'm writing this post in order to give IMDb's users a little information which, I think, may solve some questions about this film (why its plot is so "episodic"? why the DVD copy seems a low-quality one? etc): well, actually "El Sur" is an unfinished work! The production was stopped due to money trouble, and Erice wasn't able to complete his film with Estrella's travel to the mythical South named in the title. Many years later, Erice himself explained this film's odyssey in a recorded interview for the Spanish TV.
    8theskulI42

    "The South" (1983, Victor Erice)

    His first film was a lucid, enigmatic and fascinating film entitled "The Spirit of the Beehive", about a young girl in post-Civil War Spain who becomes obsessed with finding the spirit of Frankenstein's monster. His second film, "The South", is nominally about the same things, the delicate and subsequently shattered innocence of childhood, the power of the cinema, and in a more direct yet completely oblique way, the effects that the Spainish Civil War had on that country, as 'the south' becomes to our protagonist this mythic enigma of a place functioning as both heaven and hell, mostly filled in by her father's former nanny's descriptions of the complex situation the war had, and the tossed-off manner in which the stories of the father and his father are delivered are engrossingly enigmatic, theoretically to keep from exposing a closed wound to the young child, but are given in such a vivid shorthand that all the buried truths are there to discover for any discerning viewers older than the protagonist.

    The film chronicles a young girl named Estrella who is living in northern Spain who considers her father almost a deity, he is interesting, pleasant and in her eyes, possibly magic, as his enchantment towards mysticism seems to carry on to his daughter. But one day, she discovers a letter by her father where all that is written is a woman's name, over and over, and one night, he disappears for a time, and returns just as suddenly. As she grows older, she decides to follow him on a trip to a local theater, where she discovers the woman's name from the letter on a poster for the film currently playing. After the film, she tracks him down to a local café, where he is composing a letter to the female star of the film, a former lover who he would like to get reacquainted with. He receives a letter back, and soon afterwards, becomes curt, practically silent and emotionally distant, to the point that he seems cut off to the world.

    The film's themes towards childhood innocence and lost loves are universal even as they appear bizarrely unique, and although there are a lot of odd details that are left hanging (her prospective admirer, who is a compulsive graffiti artist), they seem to enrich the specifics of this particular situation even as they enhance the general associative qualities of the story around them. The acting, from the Estrellas of both ages (Sonsoles Aranguren at 8, Iciar Bollain at 15) is pitch-perfect, and Omero Antonutti is impeccable, displaying an ability to put forth a wide range of emotions in a very select amount of movements and expressions, and whether he's lovingly essaying a letter to a past lover, or shutting the world out once his reply comes back, you may not always understand his motivations, but you get the sentiment, and you know exactly what he's going for, much in the way that a frowny face means 'sad', except that Antonutti has a range of about three inches on his face with which he brings forth this myriad of emotions.

    The film's visuals have a wondrous, hypnotic lyricism to them, from the look to the style to the movement of the camera, something more impressive considering that the film is not all that stylistically obvious, there's nothing that makes you go, "Wow!", but it's there, and you feel it deep down in your soul. It's been too long since I've seen "The Spirit of the Beehive", but I seem to remember this quality being present there as well, and I liken it to the effect of "The Exorcist". There's nothing to make you SCREAM in the exorcist, they're no jump scares, no It Was Just a Cat moments, but the film has such a potent sense of overwhelming DREAD that it just crawls inside your skin and festers, to a glorious extent.

    Now, this is not to say the film is without fault. The father's transition from "good dad who has a hang-up about an old relationship" to "full-on shut-in who hates everyone and never speaks to his family again" seemingly takes place within a matter of minutes (and that's FILM LIFE minutes, not just minutes of the movie), and the particulars of his former lover and their relationship are left frustratingly scant, and this doesn't seem like a situation where the act is all that matters, this could have been fleshed out to a more effect breadth, and although I do mostly understand the meaning of the finale, it doesn't make it any less jarringly sudden or unsatisfying. The fact that the film apparently ends only two-thirds of the way into the novel seems to support this conclusion. Also, almost all of the film is presented from the daughter's point of view, but there's several important chunks depicted from the father's perspective that, although informative from an expositional standpoint, seem to sort of reduce the delicate mystery and the effect it would have created had we stayed wholly with the girl.

    The film is nowhere near as moving as the minor keys of "Beehive" were, but the film is captivating, engaging and never overstays its welcome (at a svelte 95 minutes), and is most definitely a worthwhile filmgoing experience that is worth hunting down and worth praying for the Criterion treatment for. Thanks, Vic, I can't wait to track down the other 33.3% of your filmography, because so far, you're 2-for-2.

    {Grade: 8.25/10 (high B) / #13 of 1983}
    10interpreter

    The phases of the murky relationship between a girl and her father, set in misty, northern post-war Spain.

    This story unfolds in delicate time in the history of modern Spain, as well as during a precarious time in the life of a family.

    Adolescent Estrella lives in awe of her mysterious and magical father, wonderfully played by Omero Antonutti, and weary of her ever-practical mother and of their isolated life in the misty and brooding northern countryside. Estrella's fascination with her father turns to intrigue- and then to obsession- when she discovers that her father has a secret, and realizes that she is only one facet of her father's life and not the central figure, as he is to her.

    After a ray of sunshine is cast into her dark and insular life by the visit of one of her father's aunts (played by the late Rafaela Aparicio in one of her best roles), Estrella yearns to capture more of the essence of her father by one day visiting "el sur" (the south)—his home territory.

    As Estrella enters the awkward realm of adolescence, she grows apart from her father emotionally. A tragic turn of events condemns him to remain a mythical figure for her—someone she wonders if she ever knew at all. The supreme irony is that she is very like him.

    This film is captivating, both visually and emotionally, and the audience becomes just as absorbed in the story as the characters themselves. It is one of those films whose imagery will always stay in one's memory, such as in the my favorite scene, where father and daughter sit distantly across a table from each other in an old café, listening to the eerie sound of a "pasodoble" that wafts from a wedding in another room, bringing memories of happier, simpler days.
    10ay9a

    most beautiful movie I've ever seen

    It must be almost twenty years since I saw this movie (and I saw it only once, when I was in Japan), but the memory of this movie remains in me like an old haunting dream from childhood. Cinematography at its best. I think, for the first time, this film made me think that the best media for poetry is not words, but vision.

    I would want to recommend this to anyone who loves "Spirit of the Beehive" and thinks it cannot be surpassed. But alas, I don't know how you get this movie in USA with English subtitle.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Director Víctor Erice considers this to be an unfinished project. The original script consisted of more than 400 pages and was scheduled to be shot in 81 days. 48 days into shooting, when production was to be moved to the south of Spain, producer Elías Querejeta unexpectedly suspended the project, allegedly because of financing objections by Televisión Española, the backing television network. However, Querejeta revealed years later that he made the decision because he thought the film was complete with what they'd shot so far.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Footprints of a Spirit (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      La puerta del Sagrario
      Composed by Enrique Granados

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 20, 1988 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Spain
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The South
    • Filming locations
      • Ezcaray, Logroño, La Rioja, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Chloë Productions
      • Elías Querejeta Producciones Cinematográficas
      • Televisión Española (TVE)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $22,720
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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