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La Llorona
La Llorona

La Llorona

20191h 37m★ 6.4スリラーホラードラマ

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María Mercedes Coroy
María Mercedes Coroy
Alma
Sabrina De La Hoz
Sabrina De La Hoz
Natalia
Margarita Kénefic
Margarita Kénefic
Carmen
Julio Díaz
Julio Díaz
Enrique
María Telón
María Telón
Valeriana
Juan Pablo Olyslager
Juan Pablo Olyslager
Letona
No Image
Ayla-Elea Hurtado
Sara
No Image
Enrique Argüello
Abogado
Alejandra Colom
Alejandra Colom
Periodista
No Image
Marvin Coroy
Intérprete

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Jayro Bustamante

脚本: Lisandro Sanchez / Jayro Bustamante

音楽: Pascual Reyes

制作: Jayro Bustamante / Gustavo Matheu

撮影監督: Nicolás Wong

制作会社: La Casa de Producción / Les Films du Volcan / L'Aide aux Cinémas du Monde / El Ministerio de Cultura Y Deportes de Guatamala

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

tmdb28039023
tmdb28039023
★ 8

"The fantastic level and the realistic level are the two levels upon which we live," Richard Burton said in The Night of the Iguana. La Llorona — not to be confused with the Curse/Legend of La Llorona — operates equally well on both levels, which in this case we might re-label the legendary level and the historical level. Enrique Monteverde (Julio Díaz) is an aging, infirm, and paranoid Guatemalan dictator (but then aren’t they all, eventually?) who at the beginning of the film is being tried for the genocide of Ma-yan natives in the 1980s. We see two trial scenes; the most effective is a zoom-in of a K'iche' Mayan indigenous woman giving testimony of the atrocities she witnessed, and to which she was subjected, by soldiers of the Guatemalan army while an interpreter translates her words, ending with: “I am not ashamed to tell what happened to me; I hope you are not ashamed to impart justice” (ironically, the judges refer to her as “witness 82”, dehumanizing her even further). Monteverde (based on Efraín Ríos Montt, a real-life Guatemalan war criminal) is found guilty, but the verdict is overturned and he is allowed to return home to his wife Carmen (Margarita Kenéfic),his daughter Natalia (Sabrina De La Hoz), and his granddaughter Sara (Ayla-Elea Hurtado) (Carlos,Sara’s father, whom Enrique and Carmen did not approve of, disappeared under circumstances that are mysterious only to Natalia). All the house servants have resigned except Valeriana (María Telón), whom Carmen suspects is Enrique's illegitimate daughter, and bodyguard Letona (Juan Pablo Olyslager). Meanwhile, the people have gathered around the house to protest day and night, effectively keeping the family under siege. It is then that the mysterious and silent native Alma (María Mercedes Co-roy) arrives, the new servant of whom Sara quickly grows fond. La Llorona is not a literal depiction of the Hispanic-American legend, but alludes to it through related imagery, for instance when Alma teaches Sara to hold her breath underwater. Monteverde sometimes wanders around the house at night claiming to hear a woman crying, but this could be a consequence of his deteriorating mental state. The title of the film may be a reference to the massacre in the village of La Llorona in 1981 or, in general, intended to represent Guatemala as a mother mourning the disappearance and murder of thousands of her children. The ending of the film, however, makes it clear that supernatural forces are also at play. I’m ambivalent about this aspect of the plot. On the one hand it’s almost unnecessary; this material is very powerful on its own, and the addition of a fantasy element risks detracting from the harsh reality it deals with. But on the other hand, and this is very unfortunate, revenge from beyond the grave is the closest Monteverde is going to come to paying for his crimes, and in real life we don't even have that con-solation (and it would be foolish to seek retribution for real-world grievances in a work of fiction, as Tarantino has done recently; by making Monteverde a stand-in for Ríos Montt, but not Ríos Montt himself, co-writer/director Jayro Bustamante avoids the revisionist pitfalls of, say, Inglorious Basterds). Fortunately, this internal debate is moot because La Llorona is the rare horror film that doubles as social criticism and hits the mark squarely in each endeavor; this is thinking man’s horror cinema (I was going to write that La Llorona would be something like The Official (Ghost) Story, but actually there are ghosts too in Luis Puenzo's film; figuratively or literally, there always are in this kind of story). Bustamante has created a work of art that one can approach from either of two different sets of narrative values, and each of them is a winning approach all the way from its opening scene to the spi-ne-chilling wail that closes it.

r96sk
r96sk
★ 6

<em>'La Llorona'</em> is too slow paced for my liking, it most certainly isn't a bad film though. I just couldn't lock on to what I was watching, every now and then it would hook me in but then I mostly detached again not long later. That's a shame, because there is goodness in this. It's more political drama than horror, not that the latter element is absent but I was anticipating more supernatural to this. That's mostly on me admittedly, probably not helped by the fact that I saw <em>'The Curse of La Llorona'</em> (also 2019, curiously) last month; that is a more typical horror flick, which I (unlike most) liked fwiw. No-one truly stands out from the cast, though Sabrina De La Hoz, Margarita Kenéfic, María Mercedes Coroy and Julio Díaz do warrant fair praise. If we're talking merit, those behind the actors offscreen would deserve just as much as those front and centre; it is a well shot flick. for example. Not bad, just not good. In my eyes, of course.

patient1
patient1
★ 6

Quite the Haunting introduction to the film. This telling of the story is horrific and quite heartbreaking, as any who watch will have to hear to believe. 1st Guatemalan telling for me and its story is beyond distressing, I can only imagine the Horror to come into play soon. The pain of guilt or pure hysteria, either are giving off such a horrifically haunting vibe. Either Madness has set in or the mystical is starting to appear, things are finally starting to come to light possibly. Fantastic story of Pain and Suffering

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

Set as Guatemala emerges from a period of military dictatorship, we are taken to the palatial home of ailing, retired and complicit general “Enrique” (Julio Diaz). He has been convicted then cleared of being atop a pyramid of abuse, murder and corruption but his associates are determined to keep him further from the hands of the courts and the people. If he falls, so do many of them. His trial has attracted a great deal of public attention, and so his frequent visits to court - complete with sympathy inducing oxygen cylinder - have led to angry crowds outside a home that relies on police protection to keep secure. What begins to emerge, though, is a threat that is way more ethereal than the baying mob. To be honest, this element is disappointingly underplayed but as the tensions mount, we begin to see his family come to terms with the realities of a husband and a father who was obviously a bit of a brute. This is best exemplified by the increasing awareness of his doctor daughter “Natalia” (Sabrina De La Hoz) and more passively by his wife “Carmen” (Margarita Kenéfic) whose conjunctivitis might be as psychological as it is physical. It is really through these two characters that we learn more of the atrocities carried out by the government against the Mayan people, especially it’s women and children, and though the pacing is sluggish at best this is still quite a telling drama that only vaguely disguises it’s critique on the real administration of Efraín Montt who’s brief spell in the presidential palace led to genocide. The underpinning mythology of the “Sleeping Woman” isn’t anywhere near prominent enough and so though we do get quite a compelling drama about the excesses of military power and the ineffectiveness of the judiciary, I felt slightly short changed as it’s really only his devoted housekeeper “Valeriana” (the scene stealing Maria Telón) who raises any awareness of something more spiritually vengeful going on. I has it’s moments, but sort of falls between the stools of political drama and documentary and lacked the superstitious menace I was expecting.

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