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Piedras

  • 2002
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Ángela Molina, Najwa Nimri, Vicky Peña, Antonia San Juan, and Mónica Cervera in Piedras (2002)
Drama

"In life, we first organize large stones (Piedras) such as love, friendship, family, and a career." In this way, we will find space between these to fit smaller stones, our small necessities... Read all"In life, we first organize large stones (Piedras) such as love, friendship, family, and a career." In this way, we will find space between these to fit smaller stones, our small necessities. If you act in an inverse way, you will not have the room for larger stones. The five pro... Read all"In life, we first organize large stones (Piedras) such as love, friendship, family, and a career." In this way, we will find space between these to fit smaller stones, our small necessities. If you act in an inverse way, you will not have the room for larger stones. The five protagonists of my film are women who have not been able to organize the large "stones" in th... Read all

  • Director
    • Ramón Salazar
  • Writer
    • Ramón Salazar
  • Stars
    • Antonia San Juan
    • Najwa Nimri
    • Vicky Peña
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ramón Salazar
    • Writer
      • Ramón Salazar
    • Stars
      • Antonia San Juan
      • Najwa Nimri
      • Vicky Peña
    • 14User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos17

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Antonia San Juan
    Antonia San Juan
    • Adela
    Najwa Nimri
    Najwa Nimri
    • Leire
    Vicky Peña
    Vicky Peña
    • Maricarmen
    Ángela Molina
    Ángela Molina
    • Isabel
    Mónica Cervera
    Mónica Cervera
    • Anita
    Enrique Alcides
    Enrique Alcides
    • Joaquín
    Lola Dueñas
    Lola Dueñas
    • Daniela
    María Casal
    María Casal
    • Martina
    Daniele Liotti
    Daniele Liotti
    • Kun
    Rodolfo De Souza
    • Leonardo
    Nacho Duato
    • Podólogo
    Andrés Gertrúdix
    Andrés Gertrúdix
    • Javier
    Santiago Crespo
    • Víctor
    Manuel de Blas
    Manuel de Blas
    • Empresario
    Geli Albaladejo
    • Araceli
    Ramón Salazar
    Ramón Salazar
    • Médico joven
    Israel Rodríguez
    Israel Rodríguez
    • Camello
    Mayte Vallecillo
    • Tristana
    • Director
      • Ramón Salazar
    • Writer
      • Ramón Salazar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.91.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10danielfrancisc

    the difference

    Well i do disagreed with the other comment posted. Piedras is much much better them Magnolia or any of the other films that were mentioned.

    specially about non real characters, i think that someone just wrote that only because he never lived in the Spanish society like i did (and i'm not Spanish), is a very real film with real characters, very well done by one of the best Spanish actress Antonia San Juan.

    about be a European film in contrast with an American film, well we different societies, personally i dislike American modern films a lot (i like the classics and some of the Andy American films but they are very few).

    Is a film about the continuous Constitution of a person, liked or not we all make mistakes but some can learn about the mistakes.
    9newland80

    A personal favorite

    Since I watched it for the first time, "Piedras" is a personal favorite and one of the few pictures I actually could watch over and over again. The great screenplay depicts the lives of a bunch of women (all of them somehow interconnected) with deep understanding and sensibility. Ramón Salazar achieved a compelling film in his directorial debut, and proves himself as an efficient actors' director.

    Not that all performances are excellent, though. Of all leading ladies, they range from average (Najwa Nimri) to very good (Vicky Peña), but the standing ovation should be directed to newcomer Mónica Cervera, who convincingly plays Antonia San Juan's retarded daughter. Enrique Alcides is irresistibly charming as the girl's male nurse, and there are nice small turns from Andrés Gertrúdix, Geli Albaladejo and the director himself, Ramón Salazar.

    "Piedras" is beautifully written and filmed, when I watched it I got so moved that I couldn't stop thinking of it for days. I highly recommend it.
    8mishory

    Breathtaking cinema!

    I saw this movie at the 18th Haifa film festival, and it is one of the best I've seen this year. Seeing it on a big screen (and I mean BIG, not one of those TV screens most cinemas have) with an excellent sound system always enhance the cinematic experience, as the movie takes over your eyes and ears and sucks you into the story, into the picture.

    The movie presents a set of characters, which are loosely inter-connected. Their stories cross at certain points, and the multiplicity of story lines reminded me very much of the great Robert Altman and his exquisite films. But the true hero of the movie is obviously the city of Madrid, which provides the backdrop for the entire movie. It houses the characters, contains the pavements and roads on which they walk, and sets the background atmosphere for all the events, all in beautifully filmed scenes.

    The movie returns again and again to certain themes (shoes, for instance), and in essence Salazar makes his metaphores more and more understandable to the viewer as the movie progresses. He combines the views of the city with the shots of the characters, and elegantly matches the feeling of the scene to the background. A set of talented actors helps him portrait a wide variety of characters. One excellent example is the scene in which Juaquin takes Anita across the street for the first time. It might not work on a small screen, but it gave me goose bumps easily on a big screen.

    The message of the movie is very positive, and accordingly the movie is light and funny at times. The music along the movie is usually pop, with a few instrumental pieces (I hope to put my hand on the soundtrack one day, although I seriously doubt I will).

    All together, I came out of this movie with a sensational feeling, and I'm not easily impressed (you'll have to take my word for it). For this and more I give this movie a solid 8/10.
    7diand_

    Cinderellas in Madrid

    Several story lines are interwoven here around different women characters. The shoes they wear serve as an indication of their troubled lives. All are transformed at the end of the movie. Adela (Antonia San Juan) leads a brothel; Her daughter Anita (Monica Cervera) is retarded and has a restricted life. Leire (Najwa Nimri) is a shoe designer with problems and loses her boyfriend; Maricarmen (Vicky Peña) has lost her husband and now raises the children from his deceased former wife. Isabel (Ángela Molina) is a bored rich lady.

    Other characters are used to connect the five main women characters. In storytelling not everything is given away in the beginning: Some connections are established surprisingly late in the movie and that adds to the experience. The shoe-theme is driven to extremes: For example when Leire as a shoe-designer and working in a shoe store where she steals her shoes faints, she breaks one of her heels.

    In editing small connections are made between the scenes. A telephone rings, a cigarette is lit, a song, etc. are used to make the connection and fast cuts. Frequent change of storyline keeps it from being boring or reaching TV-levels. It is strongly music-driven to set tone and atmosphere. The cities of Madrid and Lisbon serve as the backdrop for the stories, and shots of those cities are used to extend the story beyond the characters. One of the more moving shots is when Anita, who makes the same walk every day, widens her walk and restricted life from the relative calm of her street to the busy main road: How the restriction of space is visually translated is well done. As with most Spanish movies a lot of storytelling is done visually, using the soap-like stories as the simple backdrop. There is a poetic ending that is somewhat romantic and sentimental but is still beautiful.

    As Ramón Salazar is too much in love with his own material it is overlong. Some scenes are kitsch and on the soap level, including the acting (Adela's love life, Isabel's doctor). The shoe-theme is exaggerated and is a weak metaphor.

    This is often compared to Magnolia because the structure is the same. But they are different. Magnolia is more technically competent, but somewhat mechanical. This has more the ability to translate emotion and atmosphere visually. After seeing this, you are inclined to immediately move to the new movie-city: Madrid.
    9ronimah

    A must to Almodovar's fans. Beautiful and delicate film.

    Women have never looked so attractive and pathetic as in Salazar's film Piedras. Although editor's cut here and there might help the film, it is exciting and enjoyable with an intense mark from Pedro Almodovar's latest films. 5 different women are coping with their male partners and families. Beginning with several different stories bound to meet as the plot goes on, Salazar portraits his women characters in the same neurotic and border-line behaviour familiar to Almodovar. A kleptomaniac high society lady with a fattish to smaller shoes, a burlesque house madam taking care of her disabled daughter, a drug addict dancer obsessed with her former boyfriend and a taxi-driver taking care of her late husband's disturbed kids, all roaming the streets of Madrid in well designed scenes. Using some of Almodovar's familiar actresses, the director succeeds in it's first film to give depth to all the characters sharing the film, and to create genuine sympathy with each of them. The women controls the plot line, and the men are bound to be left with each other, eventually... Surprisingly good for a first film, and worth the time in any standard. It is noticeable that Salazar hesitated in some needed guidelines to the actresses, but an impressible act is shown anyway on the screen, especially by Monica Cervera, which played in his former short film.

    A must to all Almodovar's fans, and enjoyable to all.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Fanny de Castro is of Spanish ancestry.
    • Goofs
      In the second scene at the chiropodist, a cameraman can be seen reflected in the glass window.
    • Alternate versions
      The 2004 UK Cinema Club DVD was cut by 19 secs to remove shots of a dog being swung from a balcony by its lead. The cuts were waived for the 2010 Arrow release.
    • Connections
      Features Sor Citroen (1967)
    • Soundtracks
      Afro-Lefte
      Written by Neil Barnes, Paul Daley, Neil Cole

      Performed by Leftfield

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 8, 2002 (Spain)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Stones
    • Filming locations
      • Almada, Almada, Portugal
    • Production companies
      • Alquimia Cinema
      • Ensueño Films
      • TeleMadrid
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,013,638
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 15m(135 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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