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6.6/10
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When the leader of a UFO association dies unexpectedly, José Manuel becomes the only person who knows a secret that could alter the fate of humanity. Meanwhile, a young girl goes missing in ... Read allWhen the leader of a UFO association dies unexpectedly, José Manuel becomes the only person who knows a secret that could alter the fate of humanity. Meanwhile, a young girl goes missing in Spain.When the leader of a UFO association dies unexpectedly, José Manuel becomes the only person who knows a secret that could alter the fate of humanity. Meanwhile, a young girl goes missing in Spain.
- Awards
- 14 wins & 14 nominations
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Storyline
Did you know
- SoundtracksThe Outside World a.k.a Twisted World
Written by Michael Gerlach and Florian Preis
Performed by Tommyknocker
Featured review
Julio is dead . It's terrible news for OVNI Levante, the association of ufology enthusiasts that he ran. The death hits one its members, José Manuel, particularly hard. All of them share their passion about the paranormal, specially about UFOs. In these years where was very much UFOs' sightings, they feel captivated by the mystery and start to investigate the diverse theories about the intentions or purposes of the sightings. Their friendship and the obsession they have will turn in dementia and paranoia, hurting their relations with their respective friends and familiars and exposing their lives to an extreme decision due to the conclusion of their own investigations. But Julio has a secret project to change human destiny. Now he must carry on alone.
A Cine "anti mainstream" in which director Chema García Ibarra continues in his stylistic line, where the paranormal is mixed with amateurism and off-the-wall happenings , placing Sacred Spirit in Elche. In the first place, it must be said that it is not a typical film, by this I mean that the director wanted to capture a story of how rogue and contemptible people can be seen from the perspective of human daily life. Thus, filmmaker manages to create a portrait of the idiosyncrasies of small cities, leading the viewer to the mysticism of the perpetual tranquility of the place, combining with spiritualist concepts. At first, the viewer may be surprised by what he is seeing on the screen. However, to understand the film in its entirety, one cannot judge by the opening scenes. Once seen in its entirety, the narrative journey that García Ibarra makes on the big screen is valued very positively. In addition, the difficulty of not being a commercial story is added, but rather it needs to be seen as a whole to verify the insight with which each element is gradually cooked.
She obviously highlights the spiritual aspect, with beliefs that go beyond the conventional, but it is not something new for the viewer. It's actually perhaps more derived from the UMMO case, which was mostly in Spain. Basically people got mysterious notes and such purporting to be from aliens, along with technical info on UFOs and some supposedly advanced technological devices. Furthermore, talking about sects is something that has been done previously, but García Ibarra innovates when doing it in a place like Elche, sharing the symbology of the neighborhoods at all times. Likewise, she makes use of the loss and disappearance of Vanesa, one of Charo's daughters. That mystery surrounding her absence becomes frank and spontaneous that takes away from the drama, but which, at the end of the film, becomes the biggest scourge for the viewer. For these reasons, a fascination is sublimated when seeing the metamorphosis that exists in the film. Thanks to this, it goes from being a possible Z movie to a feature film that starts from a more abstract terrain to culminate with the harshest truth.
More and more feature films break the assiduity of shooting in Madrid or Barcelona, which is valued to give greater richness to the different potential locations in Spain. Chema García Ibarra chooses that Elche absent from bombastic decorations, or impressive locations on an aesthetic level. Therefore, favorably, it takes over a very defined aesthetic, where bizarre factors stand out, but always within a coherence more around the neighborhood. That is where the realization works its magic, with an art direction that maintains the purest realism: homes, bars and shops... that one could perfectly find on the streets. It is also appreciated that there has not been a careful preparation to the millimeter, that essence of amateurism is what gives it its own identity stamp.
A Cine "anti mainstream" in which director Chema García Ibarra continues in his stylistic line, where the paranormal is mixed with amateurism and off-the-wall happenings , placing Sacred Spirit in Elche. In the first place, it must be said that it is not a typical film, by this I mean that the director wanted to capture a story of how rogue and contemptible people can be seen from the perspective of human daily life. Thus, filmmaker manages to create a portrait of the idiosyncrasies of small cities, leading the viewer to the mysticism of the perpetual tranquility of the place, combining with spiritualist concepts. At first, the viewer may be surprised by what he is seeing on the screen. However, to understand the film in its entirety, one cannot judge by the opening scenes. Once seen in its entirety, the narrative journey that García Ibarra makes on the big screen is valued very positively. In addition, the difficulty of not being a commercial story is added, but rather it needs to be seen as a whole to verify the insight with which each element is gradually cooked.
She obviously highlights the spiritual aspect, with beliefs that go beyond the conventional, but it is not something new for the viewer. It's actually perhaps more derived from the UMMO case, which was mostly in Spain. Basically people got mysterious notes and such purporting to be from aliens, along with technical info on UFOs and some supposedly advanced technological devices. Furthermore, talking about sects is something that has been done previously, but García Ibarra innovates when doing it in a place like Elche, sharing the symbology of the neighborhoods at all times. Likewise, she makes use of the loss and disappearance of Vanesa, one of Charo's daughters. That mystery surrounding her absence becomes frank and spontaneous that takes away from the drama, but which, at the end of the film, becomes the biggest scourge for the viewer. For these reasons, a fascination is sublimated when seeing the metamorphosis that exists in the film. Thanks to this, it goes from being a possible Z movie to a feature film that starts from a more abstract terrain to culminate with the harshest truth.
More and more feature films break the assiduity of shooting in Madrid or Barcelona, which is valued to give greater richness to the different potential locations in Spain. Chema García Ibarra chooses that Elche absent from bombastic decorations, or impressive locations on an aesthetic level. Therefore, favorably, it takes over a very defined aesthetic, where bizarre factors stand out, but always within a coherence more around the neighborhood. That is where the realization works its magic, with an art direction that maintains the purest realism: homes, bars and shops... that one could perfectly find on the streets. It is also appreciated that there has not been a careful preparation to the millimeter, that essence of amateurism is what gives it its own identity stamp.
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $32,718
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.60 : 1
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