Manticore | |
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Spanish | Mantícora |
Directed by | Carlos Vermut |
Written by | Carlos Vermut |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Alana Mejía González |
Edited by | Emma Tusell |
Music by | Damián Schwartz |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | BTeam Pictures |
Release dates |
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Countries |
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Language | Spanish |
Manticore (Spanish: Mantícora) is 2022 psychological drama thriller film written and directed by Carlos Vermut, and starring Nacho Sánchez and Zoe Stein. An international co-production between Spain and Estonia that blends elements of mumblecore with tragedy and deals with its protagonist's hamartia,[1] the film's storyline follows the romantic relationship between a video game designer (Sánchez) and an art history student (Stein), with the former hoping to find happiness with the latter and thus to subdue his recently awakened pedophilic impulses.
Manticore had its world premiere at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. It was nominated for the 37th Goya Awards in four categories (Director, Original Screenplay, Leading Actor, New Actress). The film was released in Spain in December 2022.
Living alone in an apartment in the centre of Madrid, Julián is a successful game designer who creates monsters for video games with help of VR tools. A fire in the neighbouring apartment traps inside a boy called Cristian and Julián comes to his rescue. After receiving light medical attention, Julián befriends the boy, who confides to him that he wants to become a gardener when he grows up; Julián tells Cristian that in his childhood he wanted to be a tiger. Back in his apartment, Julián cannot fall asleep and experiences a panic attack. His physician prescribes him anxiolytics and recommends talking to other people in order to speed up his recovery. Julián has a bad sex experience with a girl he meets in a bar and begins to develop acute interest in Cristian's physical features. With human NPC templates from his work and from a hand-drawn sketch of the boy, Julián starts to reproduce Cristian in the VR, becoming aroused in the process. At a party organised for his colleague, Julián meets Diana, a boyish girl from Barcelona looking after her ill father in Madrid and studying for a distance learning degree in art history, with whom he eventually starts a relationship after meeting again near the Filmoteca. Julián removes all traces of his VR work on Cristian and commits to Diana. He rents a new apartment on the outskirts of Madrid where he performs a rim job on Diana, who gets the news of her father's sudden death.
Julián visits the funeral home to console Diana. Wanting to avoid communication with her mother, Diana travels with the company of Julián to her father's seaside hometown in Catalonia. Julián has another panic attack there and is soothed by Diana. He is summoned to a company meeting and informed that because the company keeps a register of all works created and developed with its tools by its employees, the management knows the full extent of Julián's portfolio. Julián tries to phone Diana, but she ghosts him. Still wanting to talk to her, Julián brings Japanese food to Diana's home and tells her that nobody has ever been harmed by his actions. Diana is disgusted by Julián and tells him to leave. Anxious and upset, Julián arrives at his former apartment building and communicates with Cristian via the gate intercom, knowing that Cristian's mother is out and the boy is home alone. In Cristian's apartment he prepares a Cola Cao for them, pouring drugs into one of the cups. After Cristian drinks it and falls asleep, Julián takes him to his bedroom, but he is torn about his next actions and then on the wall he sees Cristian's drawing of a tiger with a human head, named 'Julián'. Julián gets out of the bedroom and attempts suicide by defenestration, waking up in a hospital. The doctor informs him that he has suffered severe spinal cord injury and undergone several surgical operations whilst unconscious, with Diana staying by his side during that time. The film ends with Diana entering her apartment and taking care of a paralysed Julián, speaking to him in Catalan.
The screenplay was penned by Vermut,[5] in part as an adaptation of classic werewolf films on the premise that they originally sought to depict "humans managing forbidden sexual desires", with motivation for the project coming from approaching the theme of pedophilia as a curse and portraying how a pedophile may try to "cheat" on those forbidden impulses with proxies such as VR or a look-alike of a child.[6] Vermut said that the original idea for the film came from the story of his lesbian friend whose appearance resembled Justin Bieber somewhat and who felt cheated and used in her relationship with her partner when she found that that resemblance was the reason why the partner was with her.[7] Vermut stated that "I think it is my film with the highest levels of discomfort. I like to confront the things that scare me through film. And I guess looking Julián in the eye is a way of dealing with it".[8]
Some references in the film are to Francisco de Goya's Black Paintings, as well as to Alfonso Ponce de León, somewhat alluding to the tragedy awaiting the protagonist.[9]
Alana Mejía González debuted as cinematographer for the first time in a feature film.[10]
The film was produced by Aquí y Allí Films, BTeam Prods, Magnética Films, Punto Nemo AIE,[11] and Estonia's 34-T Cinema,[12] with additional participation of TV3, RTVE, and Movistar Plus+.[13][14]
Principal photography began on 27 May 2021 in Madrid[15][16] and wrapped in July 2021.[10] Filming also took place on locations in the Great Penedès area of Catalonia.[17]
Manticore made its world premiere at the 47th Toronto International Film Festival,[18] where it was screened in Contemporary World Cinema section on 13 September 2022.[19][20] Later it was also screened at the Austin-based Fantastic Fest,[21] the 66th BFI London Film Festival and the 55th Sitges Film Festival,[14][22] as well as the 35th Tokyo International Film Festival.[4][23]
Distributed in Spain by BTeam Pictures,[15] the film was originally due to be released theatrically in Spanish cinemas on 4 November 2022.[24] Release date was subsequently rescheduled to 9 December 2022.[25] Film Factory Entertainment handled international sales.[14]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 100% of 8 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 9.8/10.[26]
Shelagh Rowan-Legg of ScreenAnarchy described Manticore as "brutal, unflinching, precise, and sensitive", adding that she could not but be in "equal parts horrified and mesmerized" with the story.[27] Alfonso Rivera of Cineuropa pointed out that, notwithstanding possible objections from some viewers about an "amoral or scandalous" nature, the story manages to address the issue of "the need for affection that we all have", wondering if this is "the most brilliantly contrived and terrible love story in cinema today".[28]
Raquel Hernández Luján of HobbyConsolas awarded the film 75 points ('good'), writing that Vermut delivers "a disconcerting film at times, suffocating at others, in which you never know what might happen and you are permanently on guard", and adding that a "very intelligent" mise-en-scène helps to "demonstrate that it is not necessary to be excessively explicit in order to enter into the most obsessive, deep and disconcerting corners of people".[29]
Quim Casas of El Periódico de Catalunya rated the film 4 out of 5 stars, describing it as "a complex and problematic film, because what it talks about is always problematic", and as more than simply unsettling, "[an] uncomfortable, restive, and discomfort- and uneasiness-inducing [viewing]".[30]
Manu Yáñez of Fotogramas rated the film 5 out of 5 stars, noting that Vermut reneges on the aesthetic pirouettes and narrative twists present in his previous films, and remarking on "the sobriety of the scenic and writing work".[31] Daniel de Partearroyo of Cinemanía also gave Manticore a 5-star rating, describing the film as "a hair-raising character study grappling with taboo and horror at the blackness before one's own soul" and as Vermut's "most polished and daring film to date".[32]
Giving the film another 5-star rating, Luis Martínez of El Mundo declared it to be "a prodigious film with a structure that is as simple as it is dense" and as the "consummation of a filmography now stripping itself of the juggling of [Vermut's] previous works".[33]
Wendy Ide of ScreenDaily proclaimed the film to be "a provocative and intelligently handled picture which explores the impact of isolation and social dislocation on a troubled soul".[4]
Manticore appeared on a number of critics' Top Ten lists of the best films of 2022:
It was included amongst the 10 best European films of 2022:
Several critics also included the film in their Top 10 lists of best Spanish films of 2022:
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
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2022 | 28th Forqué Awards | Best Film Actor | Nacho Sánchez | Nominated | [44][45] |
2023 | 15th Gaudí Awards | Best Non-Catalan Language Film | Nominated | [46] | |
Best New Performance | Zoe Stein | Nominated | |||
Best Cinematography | Alana Mejía González | Nominated | |||
Best Costume Design | Vinyet Escobar | Nominated | |||
10th Feroz Awards | Best Main Actor in a Film | Nacho Sánchez | Won | [47] | |
Best Film Poster | Carlos Vermut | Won | |||
Best Trailer | Miguel Ángel Trudu | Nominated | |||
78th CEC Medals | Best Director | Carlos Vermut | Nominated | [48][49] | |
Best Actor | Nacho Sánchez | Nominated | |||
Best New Actress | Zoe Stein | Nominated | |||
37th Goya Awards | Best Director | Carlos Vermut | Nominated | [50] | |
Best Original Screenplay | Carlos Vermut | Nominated | |||
Best Actor | Nacho Sánchez | Nominated | |||
Best New Actress | Zoe Stein | Nominated | |||
28th Toulouse Spanish Film Festival | Golden Violet | Won | [51] | ||
Best Actor | Nacho Sánchez | Won | |||
Best Cinematography | Alana Mejía González | Won |