The House Among the Cactuses (2022) Poster

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6/10
Soothing cinematography for the eyes but snoozefest for the brain.
Fella_shibby9 December 2023
Even at a runtime of 80 mins i found it to be extremely boring.

A father leaves a complete stranger at his house which is situated in the middle of nowhere n inhabited by 4 young girls.

The movie has too many questions unanswered.

There is nothing scary or not an ounce of thrill present in the movie.

I have seen some of the best Spanish thrillers like The Invisible Guest, The Body, Marshland, Boy Missing, Secret in their Eyes, Wild Tales, The Orphanage, The Platform, Sleep Tight, The Hidden Face, Julia's Eyes, etc but this one is a big letdown.

Viggo Mortensen's Captain Fantastic, Eastwood's Beguiled, Selma Blair's The Tall Man n Morgan Freeman's Gone Baby Gone will come to mind while viewing this.

I am generous with a 6 for the excellent cinematography n the sun soaked settings, especially the house in the middle of nowhere with lottuva trees n sunlight.
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1/10
So dire, there's nothing to review
Little_Tyke7 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I wish I had even an inkling of a clue what the heck this movies was all about. The parents had some kind of secret but we never discovered what the secret was. It must have warranted jail time if it had been uncovered, because the father didn't dare take his dying daughter, after a car accident, to a hospital. Then it seems they buried her in the grounds of their smallholding.

Suddenly a stranger appears and he looks well dodgy from the outset. Later, the mother discovers pictures of young girls in his car that had been hidden among the trees. One of the girls also found press cuttings describing the fate of several young girls. Whether the family was responsible and this is the secret they're trying to keep hidden, or whether the interloper was somehow involved, we shall never know. A complete waste of 90 minutes.
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10/10
"The man and the woman had a twofold mission."
DoorsofDylan17 April 2023
Booking tickets for VIVA:The 29th Spanish & Latin American Manchester Film Festival, I was sad to find that due to train strikes,I would be unable to attend the last Q&A screening event being held (Dragonflies / Libelulas (2022)) . Taking a peak online for details about the Q&A I would be able to go to, the main poster for this title got me really excited about the upcoming viewing, which led to me walking through the cactus towards the house.

Note: Review contains some plot details.

View on the film:

Revealing in the very open, in-depth Q&A that she joined the project where there was just months before filming was to begin, due to the producer having gotten the rights to the novel, Carlota Gonzalez-Adrio opens the house to an exquisite directing debut, via listening in on the family with an outstanding, multi- layered sound design, which soars in the chirping of birds, stray breeze through the cacti, snapping of twigs, and the family car driving down the empty gravel road, all of which emphasizes how cut off the house is from anything beyond the cacti.

Praising them for being very supportive during the tight production time ( "If I said we need to film with the mother in the house, he would pick up the camera and go with the flow") Gonzalez-Adrio & cinematographer Kiko de la Rica closely work together to make the foundation of the family home, be built on the discreet murderous charms of the bourgeoisie, via pristine wide-shots of the family eating sausages in the cosy grounds of their household, completely oblivious to the blood they had just split on the soil.

Slicing open a slow-burn Thriller atmosphere, Gonzalez-Adrio greets the drifter with jagged hand-held shots through the house and splinters of crisp, evil under the sun light coming from the windows, which Gonzalez-Adrio stylishly shatters with whip-pans landing on the drifter becoming a less then welcomed guest.

Presenting an image on his arrival as a complete outsider, Ricardo Gomez gives a wonderful performance as the drifter, who is initially given by Gomez a rugged, naive innocence as he attempts to gain the trust of the family, until Gomez springs out with a urgency his cactus spines, which are driven into revealing family secrets.

Holding court at home as the husband (played with a sharp abrasive gruffness by Daniel Grao) drives away to work on the lone road, Ariadna Gil gives a terrific performance as Rosa, whose care-free, welcoming manner is destroyed by Gil with spikes, as Rosa attempts to preserve the facade image of her perfect bourgeoisie family.

Originally starting as a close adaptation of the novel, but gradually departing from these roots, with Gonzalez-Adrio saying at the Q&A that "Everything changed (from the novel) did not make a lot of sense to him (the author. )"

The alterations by Gonzalez-Adrio to the script by novelist Paul Pen, results in superb, restrained psychological anxiety, thanks to Gonzalez-Adrio keeping the ambiguous nature of the (from the outside) family who are living the good life, boiling away, (with Gonzalez-Adrio cutting from the script a violent act committed by the mum, that was straight from the novel) as the drifting Neo-Noir loner sketches out chilling secrets which lay at the heart of the family, until his pencil snaps, and is left in the family plot.
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