IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
A Spanish woman travels to darkest heart of Africa looking for her long-time missed younger sister.A Spanish woman travels to darkest heart of Africa looking for her long-time missed younger sister.A Spanish woman travels to darkest heart of Africa looking for her long-time missed younger sister.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Djédjé Apali
- Battiste
- (as Djedje Apali)
Malcolm Treviño-Sitté
- Omar
- (as Malcolm T. Sitté)
Santiago Adán
- Tom
- (as Santi Adán)
Yaël Belicha
- Cooperante ONG
- (as Yael Belicha)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
For someone who has lived in the Congo, this story is as real as it gets. Some reviews find certain events unrealistic and far fetched but they have probably never been in a jungle in Africa
I read another review, where the reviewer made a good point. It seems like the Western world needs someone the audience can root for. Someone they see and can feel and relate to. That person is our female protagonist in this case. And while that is more than a fair point, try not to let this get your focus of the main issues of the movie.
Genocide, hunger, murder, rape and a general abuse of power. But this does not give us a look into the higher powers who "control" this. We get to the ground, down and dirty and go on the look for our sister. Well the sister of the main actress that is. She was missing and now it seems like there is a glimmer of hope. Hope they can reunite and go back "home". But on her way, she finds a new friend. A friend that is troubled, but a friend is useful to her. Someone you should not judge prematurely or even with other moral standards than the ones he has to obey and live by. This may sound weird, but once you've seen it, you'll get it. A really well thought of movie, that takes its time (maybe a bit too long at times), but is really worth your time, if you have the faintest interest in the subject
Genocide, hunger, murder, rape and a general abuse of power. But this does not give us a look into the higher powers who "control" this. We get to the ground, down and dirty and go on the look for our sister. Well the sister of the main actress that is. She was missing and now it seems like there is a glimmer of hope. Hope they can reunite and go back "home". But on her way, she finds a new friend. A friend that is troubled, but a friend is useful to her. Someone you should not judge prematurely or even with other moral standards than the ones he has to obey and live by. This may sound weird, but once you've seen it, you'll get it. A really well thought of movie, that takes its time (maybe a bit too long at times), but is really worth your time, if you have the faintest interest in the subject
El cuaderno de Sara follows the story of a spanish lawyer that tracks down her sister, an aid worker, to a violent zone in the congo.
Once the film begins, you are reminded an awful lot of times that africa is a violent and complex place, very different to Madrid. Our main character seems completely incapable of walking the streets without getting lost or fade helplessly into the chaos, finding comfort only in white-abundant places like hotels and bars. I understand that this is the point of the character, she being naive and ignorant, but the movie ends with her being almost as ignorant as the beginning.
The movie has an abundance of opportunities to come to a profound realization, the whole arc of her sister revolves around this fact, but evades a closure for easier subjects. Cute selfies with black kids are nonstop, as are many other aid-tourism behaviors, and even when the conflict it depicts is similar to the reality of not just the congo but many mineral -rich places in Africa, they are never tied to existent names or events. Acting is Ok, and some shots are spectacular, but that is a cheap ploy to simply ignore the failure that is the story.
If you are really interested in learning about the subject, and in my opinion everyone should, you should watch Beasts of No Nation and The Siege of Jadotville both from Netflix. The later, even when is the account of a white group of soldiers fighting on behalf of the UN in the congo, does more to bring the actual causes and consequences of our thirst for minerals than this movie.
Once the film begins, you are reminded an awful lot of times that africa is a violent and complex place, very different to Madrid. Our main character seems completely incapable of walking the streets without getting lost or fade helplessly into the chaos, finding comfort only in white-abundant places like hotels and bars. I understand that this is the point of the character, she being naive and ignorant, but the movie ends with her being almost as ignorant as the beginning.
The movie has an abundance of opportunities to come to a profound realization, the whole arc of her sister revolves around this fact, but evades a closure for easier subjects. Cute selfies with black kids are nonstop, as are many other aid-tourism behaviors, and even when the conflict it depicts is similar to the reality of not just the congo but many mineral -rich places in Africa, they are never tied to existent names or events. Acting is Ok, and some shots are spectacular, but that is a cheap ploy to simply ignore the failure that is the story.
If you are really interested in learning about the subject, and in my opinion everyone should, you should watch Beasts of No Nation and The Siege of Jadotville both from Netflix. The later, even when is the account of a white group of soldiers fighting on behalf of the UN in the congo, does more to bring the actual causes and consequences of our thirst for minerals than this movie.
The critics may be right that much of the story is unrealistic, and I agree the protagonist never would have survived any part of the trek she's on. But still it is well acted with some enjoyable supportive actors, especially the actor who plays the woman who saves her life and the young man who plays Jamir-who's actually the best thing about the whole film.
"Sara's Notebook" is a Drama - Mystery movie in which we watch a woman traveling from Spain to Central Africa in order to find her younger sister who is missing for quite some time.
I found this movie interesting because it presented some sensitive subjects in a simple and understandable way. The direction which was made by Norberto López Amado was good in general but he did not succeed on making us relate to his main character since it was not so realistic. The interpretation of Belén Rueda who played as Laura Alonso was good and she made the difference. Some other interpretations that have to be mentioned were Iván Mendes' who played as Jamir and Marian Álvarez's who played as Sara. In conclusion, I have to say that "Sara's Notebook" is a nice movie to spend your time.
I found this movie interesting because it presented some sensitive subjects in a simple and understandable way. The direction which was made by Norberto López Amado was good in general but he did not succeed on making us relate to his main character since it was not so realistic. The interpretation of Belén Rueda who played as Laura Alonso was good and she made the difference. Some other interpretations that have to be mentioned were Iván Mendes' who played as Jamir and Marian Álvarez's who played as Sara. In conclusion, I have to say that "Sara's Notebook" is a nice movie to spend your time.
Did you know
- TriviaThe airport where Laura first lands states Entebbe, but it's not clear she's supposed to be in Uganda rather than the Republic of the Congo.
- How long is Sara's Notebook?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €1,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $6,298,717
- Runtime
- 1h 55m(115 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content