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La promesa

La promesa (2004)

August. 13,2004
|
5.8
| Horror Thriller

A psychological thriller about an obsessive compulsive, deeply religious woman who flees her abusive husband and accepts a nanny position for a weatlhy family in a different town. The woman's state of mind is extremely fragile, and is made worse by her visits to a Gothic church where things are not as they seem

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Reviews

Gutsycurene
2004/08/13

Fanciful, disturbing, and wildly original, it announces the arrival of a fresh, bold voice in American cinema.

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Forumrxes
2004/08/14

Yo, there's no way for me to review this film without saying, take your *insert ethnicity + "ass" here* to see this film,like now. You have to see it in order to know what you're really messing with.

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Dirtylogy
2004/08/15

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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Allison Davies
2004/08/16

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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Red-125
2004/08/17

The Spanish film La Promesa (2004) was co-written and directed by Héctor Carré. The movie stars the great Spanish actor Carmen Maura as Celia, an abused wife who leaves her home to find a new life. She comes to a small seaside town, where she saves the life of a young boy, Daniel, played by Santiago Barón. The boy's mother, Dorita (the lovely Ana Fernández), hires Celia to be housemaid and nanny. Dorita's handsome husband, Roberto (Juan Margallo) senses that something isn't quite right about Celia, but accepts her as an employee anyway.From that point things begin to go wrong. We learn that Dorita feels abandoned by Roberto, who ignores her in favor of his law practice. (She is not a showpiece wife, because their elegant house was a gift from her father. Apparently the money comes from Dorita's side of the family. In essence, Roberto is a showpiece husband.)Daniel loves Celia, but he can be difficult and oppositional. We learn that Celia is fanatically religious, and she is horrified when a crucifix in a church crumbles before her eyes. (The priest tells her it was just worm-eaten wood, but Celia isn't convinced.)What follows is basically a horror film. However, there are no crazed stalkers or slashers anywhere. There is horror, but it's internal. The atmosphere in the movie is consistently grim and laden with foreboding. You know something bad is going to happen, but you don't know what. You'll have to see the film to know how the movie ends. Actually, the plot really ends about five minutes before the movie ends. The last five minutes of the film is an upbeat fantasy, probably tacked on to keep the producers happy. Still, the movie is worth seeing if you don't mind depressing films. We saw La Promesa on DVD, and it worked well on the small screen. Carmen Maura is one of the great actors of our time. Even if this type of movie isn't really your normal fare, I recommend seeing it just to watch a truly gifted professional at work.

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Claudio Carvalho
2004/08/18

After killing her abusive and unfaithful husband, the religious and schizophrenic housewife Gregoria (Carmen Maura) leaves Madrid and travels to Galicia to visit a church where a stranger told her that everyone should go, dead or alive. When Gregoria arrives, she saves the life of the boy Daniel (Santiago Barón) and his mother Dorita (Ana Fernández) in gratitude invites her to have lunch at her house. Gregoria changes her name to Celia and accepts to work as nanny and chambermaid for Dorita and her dysfunctional husband Leandro (Evaristo Calvo). The violent behavior of Leandro triggers an insanity process in the delusional Celia, who is haunted by demons and ghosts while trying to protect Daniel from the evilness of his parents."La Promesa" is a dark tale of insanity and religiosity totally supported by the stunning performance of Carmen Maura. This low budget but stylish movie is surrealistic, and uses the religious fanaticism of an ordinary frustrated woman to build a suspenseful and credible story, blurring reality and insanity of the lead character to make the viewer intrigued about what is really happening. My vote is six.Title (Brazil): "A Promessa" ("The Promise")

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kobaincito
2004/08/19

La Promesa is the story of a woman who starts a new life as a nanny in a rich Galician household. The story is presented with what i consider to be a prefix, an introduction to the story which gives reference yet is independent to the whole. It defines the Celia (Gregoria is her real name) character as an abused housewife who leaving behind her tyrannical husband heads on a pilgrimage to a Church in Galicia. Upon arriving she has a chance encounter with a child who has run away from his mother and whom she saves by chance. She is promptly offered a position as nanny of the boy, with minor resistance from the father. It is his growing opposition to maternal rule which turns the woman and child docile and which Celia believing she is their only defender. This the context within which the story takes place. It is a Psychoanalitical thriller about the friction of the clashing dualities of liberation and the maternal instinct within a woman's psyche. The film is fairly loyal to POV, although it allows us to see the seams of Celia/Gregoria's reality. While it isn't the best example of photographic excellence and some post-production glossiness is less than fitting, the aesthetic aspect of the film is at the very least appropriate, leaving the plot alone in driving the viewer's interest. It is another excellent Spannish Thriller about a woman with a very intense reversion of the Oedipus Complex. This is catholicism and psychoanalysis to a very detailed extent, which is made believable by Maura's excellent portrayal but which also asks quite a bit of collaboration from the viewer in terms of adapting to the films own rules' of reality. I thought it excellent, but i do wonder if the film's more visual aspects are sufficient hint for somebody who is not willing to follow the very Spanish intellectual/religious premise.

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jib338
2004/08/20

"La Promesa" is one of the best Spanish movies of 2004. The story begins with Gregoria (the always fabulous Carmen Maura) as an unhappy housewife in Madrid whose husband is emotionally and, at times, physically abusive. She is devoutly religious, however, and doesn't want to leave him until she realizes that he has broken his promise to love her. She leaves (I won't say how as not to spoil the movie) and goes to Galicia in the north of Spain where she finds a rich family in need of a nanny for their son. She changes her name to Celia (the name she always wanted to be called) and her religious devotion begins to verge on insanity and soon everyone around her becomes a part of the intense psychosis waging war in her mind. The acting is fabulous as Carmen Maura once again delivers a stunning performance and definitely shows why she's the Spanish actress who has won the most awards. The film is entirely believable and leaves you feeling unnerved, but more than a little empowered in a strange, haunting kind of way.

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