Toro (film)
File:Toro (film).jpg
Poster
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Directed by | Kike Maíllo |
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Produced by | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
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Written by | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> |
Starring | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> |
Music by | Joel Iriarte |
Cinematography |
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Edited by | Elena Ruiz |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures International Spain |
Release dates
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Country | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
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Language | Spanish |
Toro is a 2016 action thriller film directed by Kike Maíllo starring Mario Casas, Luis Tosar and José Sacristán.
Contents
Plot
All of the action takes place within 48 hours. Reuniting after 5 years, two brothers, Toro and López (the former has just got out of jail while the latter was fleeing from law enforcement alongside his daughter after a theft), embark on a journey across Andalusia.[1][2]
Cast
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- Mario Casas as Toro[2]
- Luis Tosar as López[2]
- José Sacristán as Romano[2]
- Ingrid García-Jonsson as Estrella[3]
- Claudia Canal as Diana[3]
- Luichi Macías as la Tita[3]
- Nya de la Rubia as Isabelita[4]
- José Manuel Poga as Ginés[5]
- Christian Mulas as Arista[5]
- Alberto López[2]
- Manuel Salas[2]
- Ignacio Herráez[2]
Production
The screenplay was co-penned by Fernando Navarro and Rafael Cobos.[6] The film is an Apaches Entertainment (Apache Films), Atresmedia Cine, Zircozine, Escándalo Films, Maestranza Films and Ran Entertainment production, with the participation of Atresmedia, Movistar+, TVG and Canal Sur Televisión.[7] Production also featured the association of Media 2013-Back up Media and it had support from ICAA, ICO, Junta de Andalucía, AGADIC and Xunta de Galicia.[7] Shooting began by January 2015.[8] It was shot in between Galicia (including Vigo, Pontevedra, Cerceda and Ourense) and Andalusia (including Almería, Málaga, Benalmádena, Torremolinos and Fuengirola).[9][10][11]
Release
Toro pre-screened in Vigo.[9] It screened on 22 April 2016 as the opening film of the 19th Málaga Spanish Film Festival.[12] Distributed by Universal Pictures International Spain,[7] the film received a wide release in Spanish theatres on the same day.
Reception
Pere Vall of Fotogramas rated the film with 4 out of 5 stars, highlighting Casas' performance (bringing brutality and tenderness together) as the best thing about the film, while missing more screentime from García-Jonsson.[13]
Reviewing for El Periódico de Catalunya, Beatriz Martínez scored 3 out of 5 stars, finding satisfying that Toro breaks the self-imposed limits of political correctness in Spanish cinema, also considering that the film featured "one of the most conceptual visual designs of recent times", although she considered that eventually Kike Maíllo's filmmaking hids behind "impostured images lacking a true soul".[14]
Lluís Bonet Mojica of La Vanguardia wrote that the cast (particularly Sacristán) was the film's best asset.[15] He deemed however that the film does not quite come together, and that the non-stop action scenes fall into repetition and produce a certain weariness.[15]
Jonathan Holland of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that while thundering along nicely and a "central trio of fine performances and satisfyingly breakneck pace", the film's "insistence on pushing all the right cinematic buttons means that below the surface, it doesn't quite stand up".[16]
Accolades
Year | Recipient/Nominated work | Award | Result | ||
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2017 | 9th Gaudí Awards | Best Production Supervision | Toni Carrizosa | Nominated | [17][18] |
Best Visual Fffects | Rafa Galdó | Nominated |
See also
References
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External links
- Use dmy dates from February 2022
- Pages with broken file links
- 2016 films
- Spanish-language films
- Interlanguage link template existing link
- Interlanguage link template link number
- 2016 action thriller films
- Spanish action thriller films
- French action thriller films
- 2010s Spanish-language films
- Films set in Andalusia
- Films shot in Almería
- Films shot in the province of Málaga
- Atresmedia Cine films
- Maestranza Films films
- 2010s Spanish films
- 2010s French films