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10 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- An extraordinary film with an unique theme., 2 March 2006 Author: shanfloyd from India
Obaba is the film that was sent from Spain to the Academy for the foreign language film category. Considering its extraordinary theme with equally unique presentation, it's hard to imagine why it didn't get the Oscar nomination nod. The story tells us about Lurdes, a young filmmaker who travels to the village Obaba to shoot a documentary about its people. Some of the aged inhabitants recall their childhood experiences and these experiences are shown as separate short films. Lurdes tries to co-relate all their stories, in order to do which she slowly becomes a part of Obaba. The village is perhaps meant to be treated as a consciousness, as suggested by the director by his brilliant use of the myth of green lizards as a metaphor.The film excludes all the typical and clichéd camera angles and shot sequences. For using visual themes, it does many brave experiments. Some of the acting performances are worth mentioning too, for example the actress who played the schoolteacher or the boy who played Esteban. To summarise, "Obaba" was indeed a very refreshing experience for us who often get tired by the same styles of Hollywood hits.
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Perfect actress - 'almost' very good movie is definitely worth seeing, 2 November 2006 Author: (editor@thekauai.com) from Kauai, Hawaii
Not since 'A Hard Days Night' can I remember a film where I became so attached to the characters in the drama that I almost didn't believe I was seeing a fictional movie, but a documentary with an omniscient camera secretly filming reality. Viewers can't help but fall deeply in love with Lourdes, played by Barbara Lennie. She is impossibly perfect for the role, and in it; both because of her incredible natural beauty, and because of her flawless ability to make us believe that she isn't acting. But something is missing in the film. As the other reviewer commented, there are a few stories going forward in parallel, but you feel there may have been more that weren't included. So it feels somehow, incomplete. The other reviewer knew about the missing parts from the book, and the missing political overtones. I didn't, but subconsciously, I was hungering for them near the end of the film. This is one of those films where, you feel they may have had, or could have had a perfect 3 hour movie, but had to edit it down to two hours and perhaps cut out some of the most interesting parts. Lourdes carries the burden of three romances: the romance between her and her lover in the film, the one developing between her and the audience; and finally the one with Obaba. The nude scenes of the actress early in the film may have been as important in breaking the tension between her and the audience as they were breaking that between her and her lover. It's my personal biased opinion (interpretation), that the director of the film was only able to make us fall that deeply in love with her because we were looking through his eyes; his, and those of Obaba the town's itself! So what's the point? Are we, from this point on, able to be as seduced by Obaba as she was? With her seduction of her lover and us complete... the story can shift its emphasis onto the love affair between her and Obaba, the town, which covets her as much as we did. But how can a town seduce a beautiful, successful film student? In any case, this film is charming, and a very fascinating portrayal of the heart of Obaba, a character with a complex personality that in the end, is the principal character in the film.
9 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Review from 2005 TIFF, 18 September 2005 Author: Richard from Toronto
I saw this film at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival.Obaba is loosely based on Bernardo Axtaga's collection of short stories "Obabakoak", which won Spain's National Prize for Literature. Set in a fictional Basque town, Obaba follows Lourdes (Bárbara Lennie), a film student who has come to tape the town for a school project. She is soon drawn to some of the stories of the residents, all of which are told in flashbacks. These stories help Lourdes to understand the town, its people, and its secrets.Montxo Armendáriz, who wrote the screenplay and also directed, has put together a fine film that blends the past and the present. Rather than use Lourdes simply as a device for prompting the villagers to tell their stories, she is an integral part of the movie. Lourdes is intrigued by the tales and the town's superstitions, and she soon begins to wonder if she has been caught up in and affected by it all. However, the film takes only a few of the stories from Axtaga's collection, and any political overtones don't seem to be present. The movie takes a more realistic tone and lacks any fantastical elements other than the mysterious blue-green lizards that seem to be indigenous to the area.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Muddling., 8 November 2006 Author: Spuzzlightyear from Vancouver
Although this starts out promisingly, a woman in a car is weaving around dark roads in the middle of the night in the middle of the forest until she almost hits a man holding a lizard! This gave me the impression that we were going to see something special, something almost David Lynchian (if there is such a term), but unfortunately, the film starts to go everyplace, not having a core center, just sort of meandering story about a woman trying to solve a mystery of a small town. The character study goes all over the place, and I couldn't really care for any of the characters it seems, especially when some of the story all of a sudden goes into flashback mode. I had some hopes for this movie, but all in all, it was a bit of a letdown.
5 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Pointless..., 30 July 2006 Author: schiller19 from Romania
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I am looking at all the good reviews about this film and I start thinking to myself... Am I going crazy..? Can't I see the beauty from a film like this..? Am I just dumb enough to NOT understand the message this film is trying to point out? I don't know.. maybe one of those lizards entered in my head and ate all my brains as well. The film idea was going nowhere... I was sure it would have a foggy end, and of course... it did! Nothing exceptional... Not even the landscapes (I hopped that being placed in a mountain village at least the landscapes would be nice.. but no). Just a lame story about a crazy teacher, and of course her crazy students... now all grown up, each of them.. with his/her own fixed ideas. And boy some of those ideas were stupid.. like the lizard story for example. At a moment I thought I was watching x files.. with the lizard entering in the ear and all. No.. from my point of view this movie is a waste of time (not to say money if U pay for the ticket) The only part that I did like was the acting of the young blue eye "german" kid... He played very well and convincing for his age... The rest... nothing! I read the previous review and I think the script writer and the director were both on drugs when they came up with those ideas. Well considering that there are a lot of people that enjoyed this film... I think to myself again.. Maybe I am the crazy one. Advice.. Don't waste your time with this!
2 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Basque Basilisks, 2 April 2006 Author: fnorful from United States
This set of several stories is well conveyed by use of flashbacks. Lourdes' pursuit of the villagers' stories for her film project sets up several different story lines with no small amount of intersection in this remote mountain village.But there are no real surprises in these stories in that the use of "magical realism" is used inconsistently. Some stories are resolved logically and others remain unresolved by rational explanations. The film suffers a little in not making up its mind about whether to be magical or not.It's still a good movie but not a great one. I think it would be worth picking up Axtaga's Obabakoak collection to get a fuller view of this (potentially) mysterious place.
0 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- it was mysterious and somewhat i got attached to the characters of the movie, 18 January 2007 Author: jazzonline006 from India
well to start i was definitely attracted to the lead actress .lurdes , if i actually remember .the scene in which she finds a man with a green lizard in his hand in the night ,i thought it could be a thriller .but i later understood it was a very different movie from those i had watched before .i didn't her language it was Spanish .i read the subtitles,the schoolteacher was also the character resulted from emotional acting an skillful direction .it was fully clear ,the character she was portraying ;the way she scolds Ismael,adores Esteban;talks,sings,smokes with Manuel .exelent.well though i watched the whole movie i could finally get a meaning of the whole picture though i got a conclusion .it was a understand yourself movie . unlike other movies like terminator.i got attached to the movie,the characters,and Obaba. I would really like to thank the director for such an exceptional piece art as an audience.thank you.
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- strange film, 12 December 2006 Author: daniel Carbajo López from Barcelona, Spain
Obabakoak is a bunch of short stories with an only common point: the little Vasque town of Obaba. In this film, the director tries to explain some of these stories by using a young reporter as a continuum. The result is a strange film, as it has any main character (the movie spends about 20 min. to each tale) other than the town of Obaba. Any story is really well explained and the fact is that they result very boring. It was by far the best film of the year in Spain, but, well, that's not saying too much. The only good thing of the film is the precious scenarios. It is filmed in a very precious valley and it is more enjoyable to spend the time watching the scenario rather than being aware of the story.
2 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- A Thinkers Movie, 16 August 2006 Author: lafatm3 from Winston-Salem, NC
Wow, I'm kind of shocked to read so many negative reviews of this movie. Maybe you had to see it in Spain as I did or maybe you have to enjoy movies that make you think. This is not your generic Hollywood-I-understand-everything-within-ten-minutes type of movie. This is a movie that one has to think about and contemplate after it is done and it might take several days to come across what you think the movie was actually trying to say. That, in my opinion, is a sign of a good movie. Obaba is not an actual place, it is a state of mind. Once people understand that, they can see the movie for what it is: an intelligent, beautiful, and mysterious view of northern Spain.
3 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Nice viewing experience..., 2 March 2006 Author: Roby Kurian from USA
I saw obaba, last night, when it was aired in cable, here in India. Watching a movie in a channel, is always annoying, as they bring advertisements at each and every plot junctions. But still, obaba, rich in symbolism and pictured well, was a pleasing experience for me.The main character of the movie is the place, obaba itself. In this regard it assumes some comparison between City of God, in which the main character is a place rather than a human being. But in obaba, other characters also take a core part in taking the story forward. Obaba begins with a young, rather confused, film student reaches obaba, in an attempt to make a film, as part of her studies. There comes, so many characters and so many stories in flash back. Often i missed the names of characters and it evoked bit of confusion as the movie preceded. I remember a few good lines, spoken by different characters, like, We have to be somewhere. But it doesn't matter, where we are, if we are happy in the inside. This is my opinion about this movie...It doesn't matter much, what we have seen, if we are happy inside. I am happy inside even though the story, did not make much sense.
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