Co-Husbands

Co-Husbands[2] (Spanish: Mari(dos)) is a 2023 Spanish buddy comedy film directed by Lucía Alemany and written by Pablo Alén and Breixo Corral which stars Paco León and Ernesto Alterio.

Co-Husbands
Theatrical release poster
SpanishMari(dos)
Directed byLucía Alemany
Written by
  • Pablo Alén
  • Breixo Corral
Produced by
  • Ghislain Barrois
  • Álvaro Augustin
  • Eneko Lizarraga Arratibel
  • Francisco Sánchez Ortiz
Starring
CinematographyJosu Inchaustegi
Edited byRaúl de Torres
Music byVanessa Garde
Production
companies
Distributed byBuena Vista International
Release date
  • 10 March 2023 (2023-03-10)
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish
Box office4.1 million[1]

Plot

In the wake of an avalanche in a ski resort Laura enters a coma. Toni and Emilio find out Laura had been living a double life, respectively as Emilio's and Toni's wife. As long as Laura does not awaken, they are forced to live together.[3]

Cast

Production

The film was produced by Telecinco Cinema, Ciudadano Ciskul, Think Studio, and Dos Maridos AIE, and it had the participation of Mediaset España, Movistar Plus+, and Mediterráneo Mediaset España Group.[6] Filming began on 21 February 2022.[7] Shooting locations included the Aragonese Pyrenees.[7] took over cinematography duties whilst scored the film.[8]

Release

Distributed by Buena Vista International,[7] Co-Husbands was released theatrically in Spain on 10 March 2023, becoming the highest-grossing film of its opening weekend.[9]

Reception

Juan Pando of Fotogramas rated the film 3 out of 5 stars, singling out the chemistry between León and Alterio as the best thing about the buddy movie.[10]

Irene Crespo of Cinemanía rated Co-Husbands 3 out of 5 stars, concluding that it is not just another Spanish family comedy film.[11]

Javier Ocaña of El País negatively pointed out two flaws around Paco León's character, namely, León being a better fit for Alterio's [chaotic] character and León's coming-and-going Catalan accent [in Spanish], otherwise assessing that Alemany gets it right by managing to direct a popular comedy without [recurring to too much] broad brush.[12]

Raquel Hernández Luján of HobbyConsolas rated the film with 55 points ('so-so'), deeming it to be an uneven and tonally inconsistent comedy, otherwise highlighting Cimas' character and the musical score among its positive elements.[3]

See also

References

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