Finisterre, donde termina el mundo (1998) Poster

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6/10
Dreary,dull and disappointing
raymond-158 January 2002
I find this an annoying little film with a frustrating story (what there is of it) that leads everywhere yet nowhere and at the end we learn that it is all about freedom and the desirability of being a free spirit.

Two young men Berto and Mario search for their father after he abandons them at an early age and becomes a drifter. Berto also leaves the family home so Mario is left with his mother. After six years Berto comes back and the brothers begin another search together. Berto promises Mario that he will eventually meet his father. Mario is full of questions about his father and brother, but Berto consantly avoids giving direct answers.

This negative attitude continues throughout the film and when finally the brothers find their father in Lisbon. one wonders what all the fuss has been about. The father explains to his sons that he acted as he did so that they too may one day follow his example as a free spirit.

The characters of Berto and Mario are competently played. Mario's facial expressions are interesting, his dark eyes in cloe-up something to behold and the cameraman obviously recognises this. It's a great pity these good actors are not blessed with a more sensible script.

Freedom to do as one likes has a selfish uncaring element about it, but personal freedom has its own set of responsibilities to others. Even the father admits to this in the end and acknowledges that he has a family.

Geraldine Chaplin plays the part of the mother, a rather withdrawn person who never spoke to her husband, likes to eat only vegetarian food, rejects all additives and is a true pacifist who also likes to paint so that she can be alone. All in all a pretty odd family. On analysis one wonders if perhaps she is the main reason why her husband hit the road.
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4/10
Is that all there is?
jotix1007 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
A hippie couple in the late 1960s end up in Finisterre, Galicia, in Northern Spain, where it was believed the world ended before that idea was proved wrong. They love the setting and settle in a lonely house facing the ocean. After producing two sons, the father one day decides he has had it and leaves the family to fend for themselves.

Years later, the eldest son, Berto, now in his teens, decides one day to follow his father's footsteps. Mario, the youngest one stays home. Nothing is known about Berto, but Mario gets involved in a radical cause and lands in jail. As he is being given a week's leave, he finds Berto waiting for him outside the prison's gates.

Little prepares Mario for what his brother has become. Berto moves in a world of crime and drugs. In addition, he tells Mario he has been with their father, something that confounds the younger sibling. Mario stays because he feels he will have a chance to get to see his old man. The story ends in Lisbon where Berto and Mario, together with Laura, a girl who has had sex with the brothers, get to meet the father. The old man shows no redeeming qualities, all he wants to do is keep living his newly found freedom.

The idea for the film showed some possibilities, but the treatment it gets from director Xavier Villaverde. This is the first time for the director to be behind the camera, but sadly, the film does not go anywhere because we never get a feeling of involvement. The characters of Berto and the father are, to put it mildly, repulsive. Berto is a scumbag who will never amount to anything in life. Mario, for that matter is an enigma to get our full attention. Nothing makes much sense, let alone the motivation for the drama.

The best thing in the picture is the excellent cinematography by Javier Salmones.

Watch it at your own risk.
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8/10
A family at the end of its world
gonz307 May 1999
Mixing the themes of its location (the end of the world in Roman times), and its characters (coming to their end), FINISTERRE, links both in its title, and on the screen. It's a visually gratifying film which takes place on the rugged Galician coast, vibrant Madrid, and mysterious Lisbon. As a superb saga of a dysfunctional family brilliantly acted by Nancho Novo and Geraldine Chaplin, among others, the movie offers an array of different characters, wonderfully developed and interwoven in one of the finest examples of current Spanish cinema.
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