Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases


Cría Cuervos (1975)

Director: Carlos Saura

Time Out rating

Average user rating
1 review

Movie review

From Time Out London

This 1975 film is the centrepiece of the BFI’s ‘Good Morning Freedom! – Spanish Cinema After Franco’ season, and it’s an exquisitely made and deeply affecting film, told from the viewpoint of children, which has guilt and trauma running through its delicate veins.

Shot in the year of Franco’s death, ‘Cría Cuervos’ (named after the saying ‘Raise ravens and they will pluck out your eyes’) is more about repression than freedom, although there’s a hint of release in the final images set to a recurring, catchy pop song. Mostly, it’s an interior piece, geographically and psychologically. Eight-year-old Ana (Ana Torrent, from ‘The Spirit of the Beehive’) is the middle of three sisters, and we meet her in her well-off and conservative family’s claustrophobic Madrid home just as her ex-soldier father, Anselmo (Héctor Alterio), dies – joining her pale, weak mother, Ana (Geraldine Chaplin, seen in flashbacks), who passed away not long before. Ana is convinced she is responsible for her father’s death, and we see a number of episodes, past and present, real and fantastical, which sketch her uneasy position in an world where children are party to adultery, patriarchy, unhappiness, conflict and scary raw chicken feet in the fridge.

The performances of the children – especially Torrent, who has a haunting, old-beyond-her-years presence – are exceptional, and writer-director Carlos Saura moves us with a gentle, poetic ease through the film’s many complex realities. Of course, the significance of Saura’s story extends far beyond the walls of the fading home in which it’s mostly set, but the allusions are as gentle as they are smart

Author: Dave Calhoun

Time Out London Issue 2129: June 9 - 15, 2011


User reviews of this film

  • Phil Ince said...
    Posted on Jun 18 2011 07:48 Painful and arreting but undermined by the little uirl's accidental discovery of just one too many terrible family secrets. Ultimately, contrived rather than natural and less effective than it might be.
    Report as inappropriate

What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields


Cast & crew

Director: Carlos Saura

Producer: Elias Querejeta

Cast: Geraldine Chaplin, Ana Torrent, Conchi Perez, Maite Sanchez, Héctor Alterio, Germán Cobos full cast

Genre(s): Drama

Rated: 12A

Duration: 110 mins

UK Release: Jun 10 2011



Most popular on this site


Top Stories

Has David Cronenberg turned tame?

Has David Cronenberg turned tame?

Has director David Cronenberg veered too far from his radical and bloody roots with new film 'A Dangerous Method'?

The 10 worst date movies

The 10 worst date movies

Just in time for Valentine's Day, we present ten of the least romantic films ever made

Where to watch this year's Oscar-nominated films

Where to watch this year's Oscar-nominated films

Find out where to watch 2012's Oscar-nominated films in London cinemas

10 unlikely badboy biopics

10 unlikely badboy biopics

Featuring Phil Collins, Jeremy Clarkson, Nick Clegg, David Starkey and a host of other unlikely subjects

Interview: Sean Durkin on 'Martha Marcy May Marlene'

Interview: Sean Durkin on 'Martha Marcy May Marlene'

The first-time director of the brilliant new thriller discusses religious cults and robot boxing

Pop-up cinema for Valentine's Day

Pop-up cinema for Valentine's Day

Side-step romantic clichés with some alternative Valentine’s viewing