词条 | Romasanta |
释义 |
| name = Romasanta | director = Paco Plaza | image = Romasanta FilmPoster.jpeg | caption = Theatrical release poster | image_size = 250px | producer = Julio Fernández Brian Yuzna | writer = Elena Serra Alberto Marini | story = Alfredo Conde | starring = Julian Sands Elsa Pataky John Sharian Gary Piquer Ivana Baquero David Gant Maru Valdivielso | music = Mikel Salas | cinematography = Javiar Salmones | editing = David Gallart | released = {{Film date|2004}} | runtime = 89 minutes | country = Spain United Kingdom Italy[1] | language = English | studio = Fantastic Factory Filmax Future Films Castelao Producciones Instituto de la Cinematografía y de las Artes Audiovisuales (ICAA) Canal+ Spain Xunta de Galicia Televisió de Catalunya Televisión de Galicia (TVG) S.A. | distributor = Filmax (2004, Spain - all media) Filmax International | budget = | gross = }} Romasanta, also known as Romasanta, la caza de la bestia, is a 2004 Spanish-Italian-British horror film directed by Paco Plaza and starring Julian Sands, Elsa Pataky and John Sharian. It is available on DVD from Lion's Gate Entertainment under the title Werewolf Hunt. Based on a script by Alfredo Conde, according to the end credits the film is based on a true story, that of Manuel Blanco Romasanta, Spain’s first documented serial killer. Conde is a descendant of one of the doctors involved the original Werewolf of Allariz court case that took place in 1853/54 in Galicia, Spain. He went on to write a fictional novel, The Uncertain Memoirs of a Galician Wolfman: Romasanta.[2] The same case previously provided the basis for the 1968 Spanish film El bosque del lobo ("The Wolf's Forest"). SynopsisThe story takes place in 1851 in a small Spanish village apparently plagued by what we would now call a serial killer, as corpses are discovered bearing both savage mutilation and precise surgical incisions. Clues point toward Manuel Romasanta (Julian Sands), who confesses to the crimes, but claims that he is a victim of lycanthropy. A scientist, Professor Philips (David Gant), argues that Romasanta suffers not from a supernatural curse but from a mental disorder. Cast
ReceptionIn Variety, critic Jonathan Holland wrote: "Spinning something cinematically new out of lycanthropy is always a challenge, but director Paco Plaza intermittently achieves it with his sophomore feature. (...) Offbeat pic is cleverly ambiguous where it counts; however, it lacks dramatic focus. (...) Sands' wolfish visage provides an appropriately sexy combination of attraction and threat, and script is clever enough to coax out some sympathy for him during the final 20 minutes. As Barbara, Pataky turns in a career-best perf."[3] AwardsRomasanta was nominated for a number of Spanish awards, including two Goya Awards (Best Cinematography and Best Special Effects) and two Barcelona Film Awards (Best Film Editing and Best New Director). References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/813640|work=British Film Institute|title=Romasanta|accessdate=November 11, 2012|location=London}} 2. ^Alfredo Conde The Uncertain Memoirs of a Galician Wolfman: Romasanta Antípodas Monographs 2006 {{ISBN|0-9775868-0-4}} 3. ^{{cite web|last1=Holland|first1=Jonathan|title=Romasanta|url=https://variety.com/2004/film/reviews/romasanta-1200532917/|website=Variety|accessdate=5 March 2018|date=June 8, 2004}} External links
16 : 2004 films|2004 horror films|2000s psychological thriller films|British horror films|Spanish horror films|Italian horror films|Gothic horror films|English-language films|Spanish films|Italian films|British films|Werewolves in film|Serial killer films|Films set in the 1850s|Films set in Spain|Horror films based on actual events |
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