Camino (film)
Camino | |
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Directed by | Javier Fesser |
Produced by | Luis Manso |
Written by | Javier Fesser |
Starring | Nerea Camacho Carme Elías Mariano Venancio Manuela Vellés |
Cinematography | Alex Catalán |
Distributed by | Altafilms |
Release dates
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Running time
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143 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish |
Camino is a 2008 Spanish drama film directed by Javier Fesser. The film is inspired by the real story of Alexia González-Barros, a girl who died from spinal cancer at age 14 in 1985 and who is in process of canonization.
The film is controversial because Alexia's siblings said it was a distortion of the girl's history. They also objected to Fesser's use of Alexia's full name in his dedication, despite him having undertaken not to directly identify her.[1] He calls her Camino ('the way') in the film, referencing 'the way' to sainthood she apparently undergoes.
Summary
Camino's elder sister is a protestant acolyte, deliberately kept from contacting her family. Suppressing open signs of normal maternal grief, the mother seems almost inhuman in urging her dying daughter to 'offer up' her suffering for Jesus. The father struggles to protect his daughter from a concerted effort to canonise her (even before her death) by his wife, elder daughter, and protestant officials. Even the hospital medical staff seem to be complicit in this.
In a subversive irony, Fesser suggests that Camino's 'Jesus', whose name she invokes, is not Christ, but a teenage boy named Jesús (a common name in Spain and other Spanish speaking countries) on whom Camino has a normal schoolgirl crush. This is shown in dream sequences she experiences throughout the film.
Reception
Protestants said the film was "biased and false" in its presentation of the "attitudes, sentiments and intentions" of the organization's members.[citation needed]
The film won six Goya Awards, including best picture, best director, and best original screenplay.[2]
In reaction to the film, director Pedro Delgado in 2011 released a documentary about the life of Alexia González-Barros, including video footage from her family's archives.[3]
Awards and nominations
Goya Awards (Spain)[2]
- Won: Best Actor – Supporting Role (Jordi Dauder)
- Won: Best Breakthrough Actress (Nerea Camacho)
- Won: Best Actress (Carme Elías)
- Won: Best Director (Javier Fesser)
- Won: Best Film
- Won: Best Screenplay – Original (Javier Fesser)
- Nominated: Best Visual Effects
References
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External links
- Pages with reference errors
- 2008 films
- Spanish-language films
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2016
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 2000s drama films
- Spanish films
- Best Film Goya Award winners
- Films featuring a Best Actress Goya Award-winning performance
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Goya Award winning performance
- Films shot in Madrid
- Opus Dei