Plot
The real-life story of Spaniard Ramon Sampedro, who fought a 30 year campaign in favor of euthanasia and his own right to die.
Release Year: 2004
Rating: 8.1/10 (33,559 voted)
Critic's Score: 74/100
Director:
Alejandro Amenábar
Stars: Javier Bardem, Belén Rueda, Lola Dueñas
Storyline Life story of Spaniard Ramón Sampedro, who fought a 30-year campaign to win the right to end his life with dignity. Film explores Ramón's relationships with two women: Julia, a lawyer who supports his cause, and Rosa, a local woman who wants to convince him that life is worth living. Through the gift of his love, these two women are inspired to accomplish things they never previously thought possible. Despite his wish to die, Ramón taught everyone he encountered the meaning, value and preciousness of life. Though he could not move himself, he had an uncanny ability to move others.
Writers: Alejandro Amenábar, Mateo Gil
Cast: Javier Bardem
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Ramón Sampedro
Belén Rueda
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Julia
Lola Dueñas
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Rosa
Mabel Rivera
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Manuela
Celso Bugallo
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José
Clara Segura
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Gené
Joan Dalmau
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Joaquín
Alberto Jiménez
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Germán
Tamar Novas
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Javi
Francesc Garrido
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Marc
Josep Maria Pou
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Padre Francisco
(as José María Pou)
Alberto Amarilla
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Hermano Andrés
Andrea Occhipinti
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Santiago
Federico Pérez Rey
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Conductor
Nicolás Fernández Luna
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Cristian
Opening Weekend: €2,289,271
(Spain)
(5 September 2004)
(275 Screens)
Gross: $2,086,345
(USA)
(15 May 2005)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
When Belén Rueda was phoned to be informed about she had just been chosen to play a role in an Amenábar film she hung up. She thought they were kidding her.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Gené:
Relax. You're feeling calmer and calmer. Now imagine a movie screen, opening before you. On it, imagine your favorite place. Concentrate on your breathing, allowing your whole body to relax, to feel at peace. Keep it going. Just let it come and go... come and go... Now you are there. Notice the details: the colors, the textures, the light, the temperature. Feel the temperature. Let this tranquil scene unfold before you. The sensation of peace is infinite.
User Review
Life is a right, not an obligation
Rating: 9/10
If you go to the cinema to be entertained, amused, so as to fill up
your time, do not go out of your way to watch this film.
If you go to the cinema to appreciate the depths of human-kind, the
feelings of real people, to explore the characteriology of
personalities, if you go to the cinema to absorb magnificent
photography, be sure to put this film very high on your list,
preferably in first place. The experience is profoundly rewarding,
causing the intelligent viewer to make diverse reflexions over the
meaning of life itself. With 'Mar Adentro' Alejandro Amenábar has
surpassed the best he has done to date, and even redeemed certain
deviations in his earlier films which smacked a little of being aimed
at Hollywood. This is not the case with this visual poem put to music:
Hollywood could never get anywhere near the effect of this tinglingly
inspired human - and humane - story.
In no way should one interpret 'Mar Adentro' as an apologia for
euthanasia; this story, based on the real life of the Galician
fisherman Ramón Sampedro, is a cry from the bottom of the heart for
life and love, a reaching out for human compassion, for understanding
emotions. Sampedro was an articulate and intelligent man who after a
diving accident off the rocks of the Galician coast as a young man was
condemned to live the next 27 years in bed. 'Condenado a vivir' (2001)
(TV) was the first version of this man's life on which I have already
commented. However, Amenábar has succeeded remarkably at portraying
this man, with his permanent enigmatic smile and witty sense of humour,
in an equally articulate and intelligent way.
And Javier Bardem rose to the occasion, met the challenge head-on,
complete with a Galician accent, producing an electrifying, compelling,
enthralling performance, such that the actor and the fisherman become
fused into being the same person on screen. Here, indeed, is an
occasion to doff your cap, and softly mutter 'chapeau'. Bardem is
driven on in his task by a magnificent cast, especially Belén Rueda,
Lola Dueñas, Mabel Rivera, Celso Bugallo (Los Lunes al Sol) (qv) and
Clara Segura, Galician and Catalan accents taking prominent part.
Amenábar produces wonderful dialogues as these six rotate among
themselves one-on-one, or in groups, with excellent chemistry, thus
demonstrating that this young Chilean-born Spanish director is an
artist who knows what he is at and how to get his results; his global
concept of the film includes his own music, interspersed with pieces by
Beethoven and Puccini on Sampedro's record-player.
Whilst viewing 'Mar Adentro', I found myself a couple of times
comparing him and this film with Stephen Daldry and his masterpiece
'The Hours' (qv). I refer to the way in which the dialogues work with
tenseness and passion and that careful sense of timing in each scene.
Javier Aguirresarobe's photography is superb as usual. As I have
mentioned elsewhere on IMDb, he does not simply film the events and
scenes - he captures even the feelings and the atmosphere of the
moment, deftly catches that look in the eyes, light and shadows, such
that his work behind the camera is at once another player in the story.
A superb artist.
'Mar Adentro' is another landmark in the history of Spanish
cinematography, among the best five or six works of art produced here
in the last 25 years. This film places itself alongside such
cinematographic art as 'El Sur' (qv), 'Los Santos Inocentes' (qv), 'El
Abuelo' (qv), 'La Lengua de las Mariposas' (qv), 'Las Ratas' (qv), 'A
Los Que Aman' (qv), and I think I must add 'Te Doy Mis Ojos' (qv).
Superbly orchestrated story of a real man, and those who loved him
around his bedside: not to be missed.
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