I don’t like the current film as much as its predecessor, mainly because it is rooted in a fictionalised political scandal which is supposed to rouse our indignation but never convinces us that it’s anything more that the writers’ imaginings - which is not to say such chicanery doesn’t exist.
El Reino begins with de la Torre in a steadicam traveling from a peaceful beach into an up-market restaurant where the politicians are having a party - much good fellowship and expression of confidence. We learn that one of their large scale scandals may have come to light. As the film progresses, one by one the characters confront de la Torre, who is on screen most of the two hour plus running time, trying to protect their own tails or the collective tail of their in power political party.
De la Torre moves from being their fixer to someone who is prepared to tear the whole thing down, through charged conversations, power boat parties, meetings where there isn’t a chair for him to sit at the table and Police with a warrant who spot the computer stick he tries to hide in his shoe. Associates find the voice recorder he has used with an angry fellow conspirator who is afraid of voice recorders.
Antonio de la Torre, The Realm |
The wide screen, wide angle filming is super pro, even with the couple of short washed out sequences and the cast from the always admirable De La Torre downwards are top flight performers grabbing opportunities they usually don’t get in supporting roles in Spanish films.
I rather wish I liked this film more.
The Spanish Film Festival began on Tuesday 16 April
Check out the Festival website here
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