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- DVD Review—A Real Friend
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- Horror Films and Thrillers
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- DVD Review—A Real Friend
DVD Review—A Real Friend
- By Peter Gutiérrez
- Published 08/27/2008
- Horror Films and Thrillers
- Unrated
Peter Gutiérrez
Over the past fifteen years, Peter's criticism, non-fiction, short fiction, poetry, and comics have appeared in numerous publications. Current publications:
Withersin's new issue, Bone 2.2Rue Morgue (issues #82,84) Dark TerritoriesForeWord Magazine
School Library Journal
A young girl’s retreat into a wonderfully ghoulish alter-Spain in this thought-provoking new release recalls both Pan’s Labyrinth and The Spirit of the Beehive. Indeed, the popularity of the former on U.S. shores, along with that of The Orphanage, may have informed Lionsgate’s decision to distribute “6 Films to Keep You Awake,” the 3-disc set on which A Real Friend can be found. And from the outset it’s clear that Enrique Urbizu’s made-for-TV movie shares the bifurcated structure of Pan’s Labyrinth. As in the Del Toro film, the “interior” and “exterior” worlds overlap in all kinds of interesting ways and the only common element is the child (here played quietly but winningly by Nerea Inchausti) who travels between them… or is it? Is the realm of nightmare, with its secrets, dangers, and betrayals, really so different than a world torn by Civil War—or, as in A Real Friend, the domestic equivalent, the nuclear family in conflict with itself? To be sure, Pan’s Labyrinth draws the line between the fantastical and the actual much harder and firmer than does A Real Friend, but it’s that rich ambiguity that Urbizu and co-writer Jorge Arenillas are shooting for.
In that sense, A Real Friend is more clearly an homage to The Spirit of the Beehive. In Victor Erices’s 1973 classic, young Ana Torrent’s obsession with Frankenstein’s Monster plays out against a post-Civil War backdrop.
