30 Coins (30 Monedas) – Episode 1

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This is at least the second time in recent years that this 54-year-old Spanish filmmaker premiered one of his works at a major film festival in Europe. He first showed El Bar three years ago at the Berlinale. Both films were prestigious enough to be included as part of the two events’ main selection, however running out of competition. The cult director is perhaps too genre-orientated for a Golden Bear or a Golden Lion. Yet he’s guaranteed to entertain audiences.

His latest creation is another twisted fantasy teeming with horror and black comedy devices. The story is entirely preposterous and all over the place. Father Vergara (Eduard Fernández) is a priest with a very disreputable past as a boxer and former convict. He lives in a remote Spanish town. One day, a cow gives birth to a human baby. A local woman called Carmen (Carmen Machi) adopts the baby, who quickly grows into a very grotesque creature. The mayor Paco (Miguel Ángel Silvestre) and the local vet Elena set out to uncover the truth, which turns out to be far more elusive than anyone could have imagined.

The human-turned-creature is in search of a coin that emerged from under the skin of one of the subjects of Father Vergara’s exorcisms. Carmen becomes obsessed with her new “baby”. She will do anything in order to protect him from those who attempts to take him away. Father Vergara believes that she is possessed by one of his old enemies. Both Machi and Silvestre deliver energetic performances. A major duel and the grand finale take place inside a formidable Catholic church. This is a film dotted with religious imagery and biblical references, including a very strange crucifixion in its opening.

Old-fashioned stone houses, country mansions and churches give the film a very quaint, all-Spanish feel. It was mostly filmed in the small village of Pedraza (near Madrid), plus Toledo, Segovia, Salamanca, Ciudad Real and Almería. The colours are plush and vibrant, as in any good fantasy movie, helping to detach both characters and viewers from a plausible reality. The plot is entirely subordinate to stunning visuals. This is a film that relies on fantastical people, lucky charms and grotesque creatures rather than coherent narrative devices. Perhaps the disjointed elements will come full circle in the next episodes. We’ll just have to wait and see.

30 Coins has just premiered at the 77th Venice International Film Festival. It only partially works as a stand-alone movie rather than a series. It lacks the urgent simplicity of The Bar, which takes place almost entirely inside a bar under one single premise (that the guests have been infected and the venue forcibly quarantined). Still, a refreshing, uncompromising break from the Festival’s very serious line-up.

The Bar (El Bar)

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A small bar in central Madrid is not a particularly momentous place in the morning: regulars sip their coffee, a lady walks in search of a phone charger, while a beggar asks for food and drinks. Suddenly someone is shot outside and very strange events defying logic begin to unfold. Passers-by vanish and a male in the toilet begins to convulse and to display very nasty symptoms. These people are suddenly trapped in the bar, and they have absolutely no idea what’s going to happen next.

Director Álex de la Iglesia has a career spanning more than 25 years, and he is recognised for his ludicrous and grotesque cinema style. His films are a blend of horror with a comic and vaguely erotic edge to it, and he is often compared to Mexican helmer Guillermo del Toro. Fans are guaranteed to enjoy The Bar, and absolutely nobody will get bored during. There’s a major twist every 15 minutes, and the whole conjecture changes. It’s almost as if you were in a videogame moving from one stage to the next. Not surprisingly, de la Iglesia was once invited to shoot Doom (based on the videogame), but sadly the deal fell through.

The unabashed absurdity and unpredictability make The Bar a very fun and engaging movie. Halfway through the action you will realise that there are just way too many loose ends, that it’s impossible they will connect in the end. So you will just sit back and enjoy the preposterous and outlandish predicament of the characters, and their increasingly dirty and scanty clothes. The only thing that is consistent throughout the movie is the religious rhetoric that the beggar hurls out. He’s the harbinger of the Spanish apocalypse.

At first, you may think that this is a new twist on the Spanish horror REC (Jaume Balagueró/Paco Plaza, 2007), but then the film veers away from zombies and strange infections into… oiled-up bodies, sewers, syringes and an extremely deranged Jesus Christ lookalike. This is a deliciously filthy and contagious story, in the literal sense of the two adjectives. Sit back and be disgusted. Just don’t try to make sense out of it!

El Bar is showing at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival taking place this week – click here for more information about the event.

Below is the film trailer: