Luna Caliente

Luna Caliente

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Vicente Aranda
Produced by Vicente Aranda
Rodolfo Montero de Palacio
Written by Mempo Giardinelli
Vicente Aranda (adaptation)
Starring Eduard Fernández
Thaïs Blume
Emilio Gutiérrez Caba
Music by José Nieto
Cinematography Joaquín Manchado
Edited by Teresa Font
Production
company
Cre-Acción Film, S.L
Viviana Films, S.L
Distributed by Paramount Spain, S.L
Release dates
  • 30 October 2009 (2009-10-30) (Valladolid)
  • 5 February 2010 (2010-02-05) (Spain)
Running time
93 minutes
Country Spain
Language Spanish
Box office 396.029,61 €[1]

Luna Caliente (English: Hot Moon) is a 2009 Spanish film written and directed by Vicente Aranda, starring Eduard Fernández and Thaïs Blume. The film is an adaptation of the novel of the same title by Argentine author Mempo Giardinelli.[2] While the book was set during the last dictatorship in Argentina, Aranda set the story in Spain during the Burgos Trial of 1970, which caused some of the last death sentences in Spain during Francos' regime.[3] The plot centers on a rape that changes the lives of the aggressor and his victim. The film premiered in October 2009 at the Valladolid International Film Festival and had wide release in 2010.

Plot

In the autumn of 1970, Juan, a Spanish poet living in Paris working for UNESCO, returns on vacation to his hometown, Burgos. The city is under heavy police and military surveillance due to the so-called Burgos process, a summary military trial against a group of ETA members and other militants against Francisco Franco’s regime.

During his first night in Burgos, Juan has dinner with doctor Miniente, an old colleague and family friend who lives in the outskirts of the city with his wife Antonia and their only daughter Ramona. Dr Miniente is a sympathizer of the antifascist militants, Juan is more interested in Ramona, who is eighteen and shamelessly flirts with him. Once the dinner is over Juan is ready to leave but he is unable to start his rental car. Dr Miniante invites him to spend the night at his house. Encouraged by Ramona’s signals Juan accepts. However once at bed he is unable to fall asleep thinking about Ramona and heads for her bedroom. She is not surprised to see him and he takes her initial favorable response as an invitation to go further. He rapes her. Since Ramona's mother is sound sleep and her father is by then drunk nobody hear her cries for help.

Juan, who believes he has killed the girl, frightes out of the house and tries to leave when he is surprised by his host, who knows nothing about what happened, and drunk as he is wants to go with him to a nearby brothel. Juan is unable to resist Dr Miniente insistence once he is inside the car and reluctantly agrees to give him a ride to a brothel. At one point they are stopped and interrogated by civil guards but are allowed to go their way. Dr Mininente insists that he wants to party even though the sun is already risen. A heavy argument between the two men ends with the desperate Juan brutally hitting his heavily drunk friend. Juan leads the car to the side of a bridge, places his friend at the steering wheel and makes the car fall into the river.

By early morning, Juan returns to his mother’s house hitchhiking. His sister Cristina, a secret member of the illicit communist party, is following the news of the military trial against the members of ETA. Ramona looks for Juan. He apologizes but she does not regrets what happened she said she was not hurt and by now feels she is in love with him. Ramonas’ mother has been frantically looking for her husband. At the same time, a police inspector, who does not believe that the doctor's death was an accident begins to investigate. Juan is heavily interrogated as the prime suspect and is almost forced to confess, but he is saved by Ramona who provides him with an alibi. At the same time, Juan's sister, involved in the struggle against Franco, has managed to obtain secret images of the Process, which seeks to hide and get out of Spain.

Cast

Home media

Luna caliente is available in Region 2 DVD. It was released in Spain on September 15, 2010. There is no Region 1 DVD available.

Notes

  1. Majarín, Una Vida de Cine, p. 540
  2. Majarín, Una Vida de Cine, p. 542
  3. Majarín, Una Vida de Cine, p. 543

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.