Blancanieves

March 31st, 2013







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Blancanieves

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Plot
A twist on the Snow White fairy tale that is set in 1920s Seville and centered on a female bullfighter.

Release Year: 2012

Rating: 7.2/10 (1,420 voted)

Director: Pablo Berger

Storyline
A twist on the Snow White fairy tale that is set in 1920s Seville and centered on a female bullfighter.



Details

Official Website: Official site [es] | Official site [fr]

Release Date:

Filming Locations: Vilanova i la GeltrĂș, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain

Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Alfonso de Vilallonga replaced Alberto Iglesias when he proved unavailable due to prior commitments. See more »



User Review

A Masterpiece

Rating: 10/10

I watched this film today at the Toronto International Film Festival. After many years of attending the festival, few if any films have made such an impact on me. Visually stunning, every scene shot in crisp black and white shouted out that colour is a mere distraction, a passing fad.

In a silent film, apart from the occasional inter-title, the visuals must tell the story, and in this case the filmmaker borrowed from the tropes of 1920s cinematic narrative, but added a more modern appreciation of human appetites and moralities. Much effort was made to reproduce the look and tone of classic silent film down to the 1.33:1 aspect ratio, but the current technologies used in production added an extra snap, crackle, and pop.

The story is Snow White, but set in the Seville of the 1920s: a girl, the daughter of a famous bullfighter, is raised by an evil stepmother. Instead of a mirror on the wall (though she has one of those, too) the stepmother relies on a fashion magazine to say who's the fairest of them all. A plot to kill the girl - now grown up - fails when she is rescued by a band of travelling bullfighting dwarfs who care for her until she's ready to fulfill her own destiny in the ring.

As befitting a fairy tale, the story is simple and direct, though there are shades of grey here and there in this black and white world of good and evil. But simple as it is, like the best children's stories, this one resonates at a deep level. And speaking of children, it can be debated whether any Grimm fairy tale is actually suitable for children. I would certainly not take a young child to see this one.

Have I mentioned the music? Anchoring the story to the setting, glorious Flamenco appears at key moments making the pulse quicken in time to the castanets.

Such a gorgeous film. I must see it again, if my heart can take it.





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