Plot
While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty...
Release Year: 1996
Rating: 7.5/10 (13,747 voted)
Director:
Alejandro Amenábar
Stars: Ana Torrent, Fele Martínez, Eduardo Noriega
Storyline Why is death and violence so fascinating? Is it morally correct to show violence in movies? If so, is there a limit to what we should show? That's the subject of Ángela's examination paper. She is a young student at a film school in Madrid. Together with the student Chema (who is totally obsessed with violent movies) they find a snuff movie in which a young girl is tortured and killed. Soon they discover that the girl was a former student at their school...
Writers: Alejandro Amenábar, Alejandro Amenábar
Cast: Ana Torrent
-
Ángela
Fele Martínez
-
Chema
Eduardo Noriega
-
Bosco Herranz
Xabier Elorriaga
-
Castro
Miguel Picazo
-
Figueroa
Nieves Herranz
-
Sena
Rosa Campillo
-
Yolanda
Paco Hernández
-
Padre Angela
(as Francisco Hernández)
Rosa Ávila
-
Madre Angela
Teresa Castanedo
-
Presentadora T.V.
José Miguel Caballero
-
Conserje Videoteca
Joserra Cadiñanos
-
Vigilante
Julio Vélez
-
Encargado tren
Pilar Ortega
-
Encargada C. Ventas
Olga Margallo
-
Vanessa
Taglines:
Me llamo Ángela. Me van a matar. [English Tagline: My name is Angela. They're going to kill me.]
Release Date: 12 April 1996
Filming Locations: Madrid, Spain
Box Office Details
Budget: €721,214
(estimated)
Gross: $3,450,000
(Spain)
(March 1997)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The film had a relatively small budget of P116 million - equal to about 696,000 EUROS.
Goofs:
Continuity:
When Professor Figueroa finds the door to the secret library, before he enters, he wears glasses. In he next shot, as he enters the door, the glasses are gone, but they come back some shots after.
Quotes: Bosco Herranz:
What color are my eyes?
User Review
Absolute first rate thriller!
Rating: 10/10
Tesis is a film about a film student writing an assignment on violence
on film, which is appropriate because Tesis is itself, an assignment
written by Alejandro Amenábar on violence and the state of the Spanish
film industry. Amenábar has packed the film with nods towards the
industry, and the reasons why it isn't working and this ties in
excellently with the central theme of violence. The director professes
that Spain's film industry will not be a success until it gives the
people what it wants - and that theory in it's purest form is snuff
films. Snuff films don't have any production values and exist purely to
please their audience on an aesthetic level - and the snuff industry in
this film is in a boom period! The idea of violence and why we find it
is fascinating has made the base for many films, and it serves this one
excellently too. The scene at the start sums all up; we open in a train
station where someone has committed suicide. The station guards are
trying to ensure that nobody sees the horror, and yet there's scores of
people surrounding the tracks and Amenábar makes sure that even you -
the viewer - want to survey the horror for yourself.
I don't know how successful Tesis was in it's native Spain, but it's
certainly one of the best films to come out of the country in recent
memory, and a lot of the reason for that is that the director has
heeded his own advice and given the audience what they want. Rather
than try and be deep and complex like many other foreign films, Tesis
is a straight thriller, not unlike what would come out of America's
thriving industry, and the fact that Amenábar has knowingly accepted
what his film is and hasn't tried to make it any more than that does it
no end of favours. The film follows a relaxed pace, and the basic
structure follows a mystery, which is being unravelled by two students;
Angela, the one doing the thesis and Chema; someone she met because of
his infamous love for violent films. The way that Amenábar keeps the
film flowing steadily ensures that we are really able to get into the
mystery, and this makes the film far more thrilling overall. The film
is about snuff films, but it shouldn't be mistaken for one itself. The
focus is often kept away from violence, and the director only shows us
just enough of the snuff to whet our appetites.
The film's main point is to show us the mystery, but the characters are
never made to take a backseat. The two central figures are given time
to grow as people so that we can really get to know them, and even feel
for them. In many thrillers, the characters and the mystery can't be
weighed up evenly; but despite the fact that he's only a young
filmmaker, Amenábar has shown his brilliance by doing it to perfection.
The characters actually compliment the mystery, in fact, because at
times it flows because of who the characters are. This really allows
the film to become compelling, and this is also where most of the true
greatness lies. The characters are brought to life by a great cast of
young actors. The beautiful Ana Torrent takes the lead role, and is
joined by débutant Fele Martínez, who plays her opposite number. These
two have an awkward chemistry, and this is capitalised on brilliantly.
The third lead is played by Eduardo Noriega, who would go on to make a
splash in Amenábar's Open Your Eyes a year later.
Tesis doesn't get mentioned all that often in discussions about great
horror/thrillers - and I really have no idea why. This is a first rate
film, and really shows its cast and director's talent. The Spanish film
industry may be on the decline - but it wont be if they can pump out a
few more films like this one!
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