7:35 de la mañana
- 2003
- 8m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
A woman enters a restaurant one morning - only to be met with silence instead of people talking.A woman enters a restaurant one morning - only to be met with silence instead of people talking.A woman enters a restaurant one morning - only to be met with silence instead of people talking.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 10 wins & 3 nominations total
José Javier Reguilón
- Ayte. Camarero 2
- (as Javier Reguilón)
Velasco Broca
- Cliente 1
- (as César Velasco)
Sebastian Elices
- Cliente 4
- (as Sebastián Elices)
Dolores Gonzalez
- Cliente 6
- (as Dolores González)
Alejandro Tejerías
- Cliente 7
- (as Alejandro Tejería)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
What a discovery!
With a minimal budget, a running time of eight minutes and a great amount of imagination, Nacho Vigalondo has achieved one of the most moving shorts I've ever seen. The subtlety of the screenplay is really remarkable, since it doesn't give the ending away until the very last moment.
Don't let anybody tell you what the short is about, since you'll be able to enjoy it a lot more. Nacho Vigalondo is the discovery of the year for his one-man show: directing, writing and acting in this formidable short is the most remarkable effort I've seen in years. Also pay attention to the performance of Marta Belenguer, her reaction shots are incredible.
Overall rating: 8/10
Don't let anybody tell you what the short is about, since you'll be able to enjoy it a lot more. Nacho Vigalondo is the discovery of the year for his one-man show: directing, writing and acting in this formidable short is the most remarkable effort I've seen in years. Also pay attention to the performance of Marta Belenguer, her reaction shots are incredible.
Overall rating: 8/10
Love it.
Good film. Tells a boyish fantasy story, telling us how trapped we are in social situations and what kind of extreme measures one has to take to behave differently. Or at least the feeling: that you have to break every rule if you are to break one. If you wanted to express love for someone you don't know, how would you do it without creating a pressing social situation? Also it's about the fascism of deciding over others cultural life, of what kind of culture that is jammed down our throats. What gives Disney or FOX or the suicide bomber the right to decide what is our choice. Are one not allowed to drink the morning coffee by one self. Do we have to listen to the NRJ shouting, see the stupid tabloid headlines and the street commercials before we even have had our morning coffee?
An amusing 8 minute masterpiece.
This 2004 Oscar nominee is a very short b/w film in Spanish. A young woman goes into a café, gets a coffee, and notices a couple of musicians standing silently with their instruments. All the patrons are motionless, like mannequins. One guy, however, is quite jolly and breaks into a song about what goes on at 7:35 in the morning. There is one surprising moment after another until the end which is quite, well, surprising. The people, the place, everything looks quite ordinary. And like the musical piece "Bolero", the thing keeps building until the climax. With its structure, theme,movement and wit,it is an 8 minute masterpiece.
Ingenious
After seeing the director's feature film Colossal I decided to check out his early short, and found it quite entertaining. Like Colossal, it defies expectations, creating a series of weird moments that cause the audience to redefine what they thought was happening just before. The movie seamlessly moves from mysterious to charming to disturbing without ever breaking stride.
In the end you are left wondering how it all played out before the film started. How long ago did it start, how did it start? You don't know, and that's much of the beauty of this film; it has a sort of psychological tail (like Colossal) that keeps you thinking about it.
I really have to see all this guy's stuff. He's fascinating.
In the end you are left wondering how it all played out before the film started. How long ago did it start, how did it start? You don't know, and that's much of the beauty of this film; it has a sort of psychological tail (like Colossal) that keeps you thinking about it.
I really have to see all this guy's stuff. He's fascinating.
in a coffee shop
The love declaration for a young woman in the most unreasonable manner. This is the heart of this provocative short film, absurd in its first part, dramatic in the second. A man, prepaired to die , his song and the clients as pieces of his plan to conquer, maybe, the attention of young lady. The brutal end and the flavors of his song.
Short, scent of 1970 decade and gentle kick to define yourself , remembering ordinary, insignificants moments of everyday.
Short, scent of 1970 decade and gentle kick to define yourself , remembering ordinary, insignificants moments of everyday.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the customers is the director's mother, Resu Vigalondo.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 77th Annual Academy Awards (2005)
- SoundtracksA las 7:35 de la mañana
Performed by Nacho Vigalondo
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- 7:35 in the Morning
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 8m
- Color
- Sound mix
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