The Wooden Box (film)

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The Wooden Box (film)
File:The Wooden Box (film) poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Juan Carlos Falcón
Produced by Andrés Santana
Screenplay by Juan Carlos Falcón
Starring
Music by Joan Valent
Cinematography Gonzalo Berridi
Edited by José Salcedo
Production
company
  • Aiete-Ariane films
  • Oberón Cinematográfica
  • Take 2000
Release dates
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  • 27 October 2006 (2006-10-27) (Seminci)
  • 1 June 2007 (2007-06-01) (Spain)
Country
  • Spain
  • Portugal
Language Spanish

The Wooden Box (Spanish: La caja)[1] is a 2006 Spanish-Portuguese black comedy film directed and written by Juan Carlos Falcón in his directorial feature debut which stars Ángela Molina, Elvira Mínguez, Antonia San Juan, Vladimir Cruz, and María Galiana.

Plot

Set in a Canarian village in 1965, the plot follows Eloísa, a widow who sets a makeshift wake for her deceased husband Don Lucio (with whom all the locals have scores to settle) in the residence of her friend Isabel.[2][3]

Cast

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Production

The Wooden Box is inspired by Víctor Ramírez's (es) novel Nos dejaron el muerto.[4] It is a Spanish-Portuguese co-production by Aiete-Ariane Films and Oberón Cinematográfica alongside Take 2000,[5] with support from Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Ayuntamiento de Pájara, Cabildo Insular de La Palma (es), Cabildo Insular de Fuerteventura (es), Patronato de Turismo de La Palma, and Canarias Cultura en Red.[2] It was shot in the islands of Fuerteventura and La Palma while filming for some indoor footage took place in Madrid.[4]

Release

The film was selected for screening out of competition at the 51st Valladolid International Film Festival on 27 October 2006.[2][6] It was theatrically released in Spain on 1 June 2007.[3]

Reception

Pere Vall of Fotogramas rated the film 3 out of 5 stars, highlighting its looks and the actresses as the best things about the film whilst citing the characters of Vladimir Cruz and Jordi Dauder as the worst things about it.[3]

Javier Ocaña of El País considered that despite a story with almost always promising situations, the black comedy film is flawed because of a mise-en-scène that "is continually stagnant", the editing, and dialogues which are not as fast as they should be, writing that "it is as if Robert Bresson had filmed a script by Luis García Berlanga".[7]

Accolades

Year Recipient/Nominated work Award Result
2007 Montreal World Film Festival Golden Zenith Won [1]
12th Toulouse Spanish Film Festival Golden Violet Won [8]
2008 17th Actors and Actresses Union Awards Best Film Actor in a Secondary Role Vladimir Cruz Nominated [9][10]

See also

References

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