Boy Missing

Boy Missing (Spanish: Secuestro)[1] is a 2016 Spanish thriller film directed by Mar Targarona from a screenplay by Oriol Paulo which stars Blanca Portillo.

Boy Missing
Film poster
SpanishSecuestro
Directed byMar Targarona
Screenplay byOriol Paulo
Produced by
  • Mar Targarona
  • Joaquín Padró
Starring
CinematographySergi Bartrolí
Edited byJuan Manuel Vilaseca
Music byMarc Vaillo
Production
company
Rodar y Rodar
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing de España
Release date
  • 19 August 2016 (2016-08-19)
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Disabled boy Víctor goes missing to the dismay of his mother, lawyer Patricia de Lucas. After Víctor's reappearance and claim that he had been kidnapped by a man, Patricia decides to take justice into her own hands.[2]

Cast

Production

The film was produced by Rodar y Rodar and it had the participation of RTVE, Cosmopolitan TV, TVC, and Movistar+.[5]

Shooting locations in Catalonia included Barcelona, Tarragona, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Tavertet, and Terrassa.[6]

Release

Distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing de España,[7] the film was released theatrically in Spain on 19 August 2016. It grossed €304,020 in its opening weekend.[8]

Reception

Jordi Costa of El País wrote that "any resemblance between this film and an incisive reading of our reality seems purely coincidental", with the outcome turning out to be "a string of plot twists and turns" and "a cast of dedicated actors" "trying to swim against the currents of implausibility".[9]

Marta Medina of El Confidencial assessed that Targarona does not get the mise-en-scène to work well, with "the candor of some of the directorial bets significantly detracting from the result", some attempts at originality notwithstanding.[4]

Pere Vall of Fotogramas rated the film 3 out of 5 stars, highlighting Portillo and the quinqui couple formed by Herrera and Gómez as the best things about the film.[2]

Raquel Hernández Luján of HobbyConsolas rated the film with 50 points ('so so') deeming it to be "a thriller that finds its ballast in its key pieces: script, direction of actors and narrative fluidity".[10]

Manuel J. Lombardo of Diario de Sevilla wrote about "the tonal and argumental nonsense of a film in which every element becomes a cliché·.[11]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.