A cannily observant but withholding film in which nothing happens, over and again.
Mondays in the Sun (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:67
Fresh:53
Rotten:14
Average Rating:6.9/10
Consensus: Thought-provoking, but plodding movie about the effects of unemployment on a group of former shipyards workers.
Runtime: 1 hr 55 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: A northern Spanish coastal town suffers from its own isolationism as shipyards close down, leaving the labor force scouring the streets for temp jobs with only their stubborn pride to show for it.... A northern Spanish coastal town suffers from its own isolationism as shipyards close down, leaving the labor force scouring the streets for temp jobs with only their stubborn pride to show for it. Among the disillusioned is Santa (Javier Bardem), a cocksure, angry rebel who refuses to admit his own failures. Santa is the ring leader of a group of rapidly aging friends whose unemployed status causes them mounting grief. They drown their sorrows in an otherwise empty bar owned by Rico (Joaquin Climent), one of their coworkers from what now seems another life. While Santa tries to clumsily seduce women and pay for a lamp post he vandalized in anger, his companions battle serious alcoholism, loan denials, and marriage troubles, as they all face their own insignificance. Javier Bardem perfectly embodies the defiant loser that is Santa. Letting himself go and carrying a hefty gut, Bardem manages to exude the false charm of a bitter sad sack who has remained a lady's man. Captured in gritty detail, director Fernando Leon de Aranoa offers a shattered image of the proud work force of northern Spain in a picture that won five Goya Awards, Spain's equivalent to the Oscars. [More]
Starring: Javier Bardem, Luis Tosar, Jose Angel Egid, Nieve de Medina
Starring: Javier Bardem, Luis Tosar, Jose Angel Egid, Nieve de Medina, Enrique Villen, Celso Bugallo, Joaquin Clement, Aida Folch, Serge Riaboukine, Laura Dominguez
Director: Fernando León de Aranoa
Director: Fernando León de Aranoa
Screenwriter: Fernando León de Aranoa
Producer: Elias Querejeta
Composer: Lucio Godoy
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Reviews for Mondays in the Sun
A piece of sophisticated, subtle filmmaking that is both thoughtful and thought-provoking.
Mondays in the Sun has come to illustrate just how hard it is to do what Ken Loach and Laurent Cantet make seem so effortless.
Javier Bardem plays the part with all the pent-up animal rage of a young Robert De Niro
'Mondays in the Sun' captures the small drama of the individual buffeted against larger impersonal events of local, national and world politics and economics.
It's a bit of a challenge to watch, but Javier Bardem fans will want to check it out.
This slow, episodic film is held together by the galvanic presence of Javier Bardem.
Aranoa’s storytelling is full of fire and nuance, and his striking, heartbreaking, mutedly hopeful film exhibits the spirit of its Italian neo-realist predecessors.
A well-acted, realistic look at unemployed shipyard workers in northern Spain alternating humor with pathos.
The smartly written picture is graced by another accomplished Javier Bardem performance.
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