Cria Cuervos (1976) Spain
Cria Cuervos Image Cover
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Director:Carlos Saura
Studio:Criterion
Producer:Elías Querejeta, Pedro El Samu
Writer:Carlos Saura
Rating:4
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2012-11-15
UPC:0715515025225
Price:$39.95
Awards:Nominated for Golden Globe, Another 7 wins & 3 nominations
Genre:Spanish films
Release:2007-08-14
IMDb:0074360
Duration:110
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:Spanish
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300010574
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Carlos Saura  ...  (Director)
Carlos Saura  ...  (Writer)
 
Geraldine Chaplin  ...  Ana - The Mother
Mónica Randall  ...  Paulina - The Aunt
Florinda Chico  ...  Rosa
Ana Torrent  ...  Ana
Héctor Alterio  ...  Anselmo
Teo Escamilla  ...  Cinematographer
Pablo G. del Amo  ...  Editor
Germán Cobos  ...  Nicolás Garontes
Mirta Miller  ...  Amelia Garontes
Josefina Díaz  ...  Abuela - The Grandmother
Conchita Pérez  ...  Irene
Mayte Sanchez  ...  Juana (as Maite Sánchez)
Juan Sánchez Almendros  ...  
Carlos Saura  ...  Story
Teodoro Escamilla  ...  Cinematographer
Pablo González del Amo  ...  Film Editor
Bernardo Menz  ...  Sound Department
Miguel Ángel Polo  ...  Sound Department
Federico Monpou  ...  Composer
Rafael Palmero  ...  Production Designer
Maiki Marín  ...  Custome Designer
Tomasa Benito  ...  assistant makeup artist
Concepción Cano  ...  hair stylist
Romana González  ...  Makeup Artist
Roberto Parra  ...  second assistant director
Pedro Perez  ...  Assistant Director
Francisco J. Querejeta  ...  Assistant Director
Jesús Mateos  ...  furniture maker (as J. Mateos)
Antonio Illán  ...  sound re-recordist (as Antonío Illán)
Summary: Carlos Saura’s exquisite Cría cuervos… heralded a turning point in Spain: Shot while General Franco was on his deathbed, the film melds the personal and the political in a portrait of the legacy of fascism and its effects on a middle-class family (the title derives from the Spanish proverb: "Raise ravens and they’ll peck out your eyes"). Ana Torrent (the dark-eyed beauty from The Spirit of the Beehive) portrays the disturbed eight-year-old Ana, living in Madrid with her two sisters and mourning the death of her mother, whom she conjures as a ghost (played by an ethereal Geraldine Chaplin). Seamlessly shifting between fantasy and reality, the film subtly evokes both the complex feelings of childhood and the struggles of a nation emerging from the shadows.