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Arrebato

  • 1979
  • Unrated
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
Arrebato (1979)
Watch U.S. Trailer
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
34 Photos
DramaFantasyHorrorMystery

A low budget horror filmmaker gets in touch with an eccentric who is trying to film his consciousness during drug abuse.A low budget horror filmmaker gets in touch with an eccentric who is trying to film his consciousness during drug abuse.A low budget horror filmmaker gets in touch with an eccentric who is trying to film his consciousness during drug abuse.

  • Director
    • Iván Zulueta
  • Writer
    • Iván Zulueta
  • Stars
    • Eusebio Poncela
    • Cecilia Roth
    • Will More
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Iván Zulueta
    • Writer
      • Iván Zulueta
    • Stars
      • Eusebio Poncela
      • Cecilia Roth
      • Will More
    • 20User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    U.S. Trailer

    Photos34

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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Eusebio Poncela
    Eusebio Poncela
    • José Sirgado
    Cecilia Roth
    Cecilia Roth
    • Ana Turner
    Will More
    Will More
    • Pedro
    Marta Fernández Muro
    Marta Fernández Muro
    • Marta
    Helena Fernán-Gómez
    Helena Fernán-Gómez
    • Gloria
    Carmen Giralt
    • Tía Carmen
    Max Madera
    • Chapero
    Javier Ulacia
    • Dependiente de la tienda de fotos
    • (as Javi Ulacia)
    Rosa Crespo
    • Vampira
    Luis Ciges
    Luis Ciges
    • Portero
    Alaska
    Alaska
    • Chica con la tarta
    • (uncredited)
    Pedro Almodóvar
    Pedro Almodóvar
    • Gloria
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Teresa Fernández Muro
      Antonio Gasset
      Antonio Gasset
      • Montador
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Iván Zulueta
      • Writer
        • Iván Zulueta
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews20

      6.83.7K
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      Featured reviews

      EyeAskance

      A conceptual, post-structuralist phantasm which demands attention

      Jose, a director of schlock horror films, is a high-functioning heroin addict who's experiencing a burnout phase in his career, and frustration over a rocky, on-again/off-again relationship he can't seem to terminate. He receives an unexpected parcel from a fleeting acquaintance named Pedro, a cousin of an old flame, who makes raw naturalistic films variably similar to the works of STAN BRAKHAGE. The parcel contains a filmreel, Pedro's housekey, and a cassette tape on which he's recorded himself expounding a bizarre personal odyssey which initialized at a time when Jose had assisted him in matters of interval time filming. The fervid, gravelly-voiced storytelling spans the film's remaining duration, cryptically implying that Pedro's Super8 camera has taken on a predatory sentience vaguely vampiric in nature...by sucking people away from the Earthly plane, and into the cinematic one(a metamorphosis which Pedro insists is sublimely blissful). This outlandish disclosure is confirmed when Jose watches the filmreel, at which point he realizes why Pedro had sent him the key to his apartment. It is there that Jose will face his ordained destiny under the officious eye of Pedro's camera.

      That ARREBATO comes from a director with such a minimal body of work is surprising...it's a professionally appointed abstraction which is comparable to little else, though touches of LYNCH, CRONENBERG, and ECKHART SCHMIDT are sometimes evident. It's a cynical, allegorical, and occasionally plaintive excursion into a dreary alternate reality, underscored with notes of homoerotic suggestion, heroin chic, and pointed political commentary.

      There's an intriguing mystery in Pedro's prolonged tape-recorded anecdotes...it's an abstruse and strangely tantalizing expository device which juxtaposes the film's deliberately dallying visual tedium. Narcotics are a preponderance of the proceedings, chiefly regarding their potency to electrify creative vitality while simultaneously draining it dry. I might argue that the "vampire" of the story isn't the actual, tangible camera...rather, it is cinema itself. More specifically, it's the ART of cinema, which, like a god, casts judgment in accordance with one's personal filmic refinements (**spoiler**) It would seem that Pedro has been raptured to a higher plane of existence, owing to his impassioned visionary buoyancy. Jose, conversely, has lost that creative brio, and is thus rendered unworthy or ineligible for ascension. He is denied passage, and promptly exterminated.

      As extravagantly outré as it is, ARREBATO is handled quite confidently, and the key players vitalize their characters with moxie. Sure, it's blemished, and certainly not for all tastes, but it's audaciously and undeniably sui generis. That's mighty refreshing in a time when remakes of remakes are the order of the day.

      7/10...a worthy legacy for its late director, whose too-brief life is said to have had many unfortunate parallels with this film.
      10Weirdling_Wolf

      An extraordinary, oblique, and disturbing celluloid nightmare!

      Director, Ivan Zulueta's sublime 'Arrebato' (1979) is an extraordinarily oblique, insidiously disturbing, deliciously deranged Spanish nightmare, and for reasons that still elude me, this psychotronic oddity remains largely undocumented, and is greatly deserving of a pristine, fan-pleasing Blu-ray restoration! This divinely sinister piece of stylish movie macabre, eerily documents the gradual subversion, and inexorable psychological collapse of a young, hopelessly dope-addled, profoundly jaded filmmaker's life. He is pitilessly plunged into a darkly descending, surrealist miasma, over the ostensibly vampiric properties of an especially hypnotic, phantasmagorical super-8 film that once seen is not soon forgotten! To reiterate, 'Arrebato' is a strikingly lucid and fiercely imaginative work of fantastically far-out cinema that includes some genuinely unsettling sequences. The impressively iconoclastic film's singularly intriguing narrative enigma grips you firmly right from the exquisitely terse opening gambit, and then invidiously immerses the increasingly discombobulated viewer into its unrelenting maelstrom of hallucinatory strangeness! Ivan Zulueta's beautifully audacious work of uniquely twisted torment is a sublimely suffocating, chillingly claustrophobic, bravura, B-movie Bunuel for the more diabolically minded, scream-seeking, Euro-cult maniacs to enjoy!
      7vekkali

      Good one but not for Mystery/Thriller entertainment lovers.

      Writing this review after watching movie just now. It was a slow,bizarre, unexpected and confused thrill feeling in the end.

      Up to 1 hour 30 minutes, i was wondering what is the movie about. Last 30 minutes was making sense or a story or screenplay.

      It was a kind of slow paced mystery,supernatural and finally let u guess movie.

      I felt good but not a mystery or thriller or supernatural genre.

      It is food for movie critics and movie lovers( I am not Either)

      Good one but not for Mystery/Thriller entertainment lovers.
      7ma-cortes

      Bizarre and outlandish film , resulting in a hallucinatory and claustrophobic experience

      José Sirgado (Eusebio Poncela) is a frustrated horror film director of short budget stories and heroin addict in a thunderous relationship with Ana Turner (Cecilia Roth) . The cousin of his ex-girlfriend Marta (Marta Fernandez Muro) , outcast Pedro (Will More) , sends him a reel of film , an audio cassette, and the key to his apartment despite the fact that the two have only met twice. As José and Ana listen , the audio cassette narrates the two occasions when the two men met . The strange Pedro, who is an obsessive maker of homemade films , snorts heroin with José and asks if he knows how to film time-lapse photography. Pedro shows José his home movie s, which he has never shown to anyone . Later on , José , mails Pedro an interval timer that would control his camera's shutter, shooting at specified intervals . Shortly after , the rare and offbeat Pedro is suddenly missing . As the druggie filmmaker will investigate what happened with the author while shooting his brief consciousness during drug abuse which subsequently disappeared. The research will lead the characters to fall deeper in drugs addiction.

      A plain and simple plot dealing with a short budget horror filmmaker gets in touch with an eccentric young who is attempting to shoot weird movies becomes into a confuse yarn in David Lynch style resulting in a quasi-lysergic experience for the spectators . This is a ¨cult movie¨ deemed to be the fundamental and essential film of the ¨Spanish Movida¨ of the late 70s and early 80s that took place mainly in Madrid , and away from the thematic and technical assumptions of conventional cinema . The picture chooses to play freely with the elements of audiovisual language with a claustrophobic examination of the secret potency of shoot itself with astonishing time-lapse frames . It results to be a challenge for movie exegesis , that's why some reviewers panned extremely the film because of it contains uncompelling characters and "inscrutable" screenplay . Trio starring : Eusebio Poncela , Will More , Cecilia Roth , giving nice acting . They are accompanied by brief appearances and cameos from Elena Fernán Gómez , Luis Ciges , Alaska , Pedro Almodovar , some of the uncredited. Special mention for the film's cinematography by Angel Luis Fernández , mood , strange musical score and director Zulueta's building of tension . It packs an atmospheric and eerie soundtrack by Negativo and Iván Zulueta himself but uncredited , adding fragments from Siegfried's Funeral March written by Richard Wagner and a song : I Want You, I Need You, I Love You written by Ira Kosloff and performed by Cecilia Roth .

      The picture was original but rarely directed by Iván Zulueta . Iván was born in 1943 and died 2009 in Donostia-San Sebastián, Guipúzcoa, País Vasco, Spain . He was a director and writer, especially known for this Arrebato (1979) , Un, dos, tres... al escondite inglés (1970) and a lot of shorts as A mal gam (1976) Frank Stein , Masaje , Kinkón, among others . Zulueta with Arrebato won several nominations and prizes as Chicago International Film Festival 1980 Nominee Gold Hugo Best Feature Iván Zulueta ; Fantasporto 1982 Winner Critics' Award Iván Zulueta Winner International Fantasy Film Award Best Screenplay Iván Zulueta Best Actor Eusebio Poncela ; Nominee International Fantasy Film Award Best Film Iván Zulueta and Mystfest 1980 Nominee Best Film Iván Zulueta. Rating : 6.5/10 . The flick will appeal to ¨Cult Movies¨fans. .
      8oliveira-7

      A major cult film from Spain

      From initial ridicule (despite the official recommendation as a quality feature) to flat-out praise, it took more than twenty years to realize the seminal influence of this film on Spanish production, from Almodovar onwards. It draws many influences from the Warhol-esque New York underground scene but has tremendous scenes.

      Whoever wants to understand what Betty Boop was all about, must see Cecilia Roth dance scene, it is fabulous.

      Contains a lot of drug addiction references, which should be seen as an analogy to the addiction to capturing moving pictures and watching them. The only way for a film director to get rid of the latter is to dissolve into the industry.

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      Related interests

      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
      Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
      Fantasy
      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror
      Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
      Mystery

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Helena Fernán-Gómez was dubbed in post-production by Pedro Almodóvar, because he could fake a more feminine voice that Zulueta wanted for the character.
      • Connections
        Featured in Arrebatados. Recordando a Iván Zulueta (2010)
      • Soundtracks
        Götterdämmerung: Act III - Siegfried's Funeral March
        (uncredited)

        Written by Richard Wagner

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      FAQ17

      • How long is Arrebato?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • August 26, 1983 (Portugal)
      • Country of origin
        • Spain
      • Language
        • Spanish
      • Also known as
        • Rapture
      • Filming locations
        • La Mata del Pirón, Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain
      • Production company
        • Nicolás Astiarraga P.C.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross worldwide
        • $2,439
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 55m(115 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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