- Source: Ants in the Mouth
Ants in the Mouth (Spanish: Hormigas en la boca) is a 2005 Spanish-Cuban thriller film directed by Mariano Barroso, who has also co-written the screenplay along with Alejandro Hernández and Tom Abrams, adapting the novel Amanecer con hormigas en la boca by Miguel Barroso. It stars Eduard Fernández, Ariadna Gil, Jorge Perugorría and José Luis Gómez.
Plot
The fiction is set in the late 1950s. Released from jail after spending 8 years in a Francoist prison, Martín moves to pre-revolutionary Havana, Cuba, looking for his girlfriend Julia, and once there, he is told by Julia's uncle Dalmau that she is dead. He eventually finds out that she had married Freddy Navarro, a corrupt senator of the Batista regime.
Cast
Production
Penned by Mariano Barroso and Alejandro Hernández with the collaboration of Tom Abrams, the screenplay is an adaptation of the novel Amanecer con hormigas en la boca by Miguel Barroso, Mariano Barroso's elder brother. A Spanish-Cuban co-production, the film was produced by Drive Cine, Messidor Films and ICAIC with participation of TVE and Canal+. Eduardo Campoy, Gerardo Herrero, and José Manuel Lorenzo were credited as producers. Boasting a budget of around €4 million, the film was shot in 2004 in locations of Cuba (including Havana) and Spain.
Release
Ants in the Mouth premiered as the opening film of the 8th Málaga Film Festival in April 2005. Distributed by Filmax, the film was theatrically released in Spain on 29 April 2005.
Reception
Jonathan Holland of Variety deemed the film to be "a brooding, intense and shrewdly-plotted thriller set in 1950s Havana", featuring a "beautifully modulated" lead performance by Fernández, although, conversely, the reviewer assessed that Gil fails to turn "her femme fatale beauty into anything deeper".
Accolades
See also
List of Spanish films of 2005
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ants in the Mouth
- Ariadna Gil
- Adam and the Ants
- Ant
- Eduard Fernández
- Blackish blind snake
- List of Cuban films
- Autothysis
- Javier Aguirresarobe
- Málaga Film Festival