Seres queridos
Facts
| Directed by | Teresa Pelegri and Dominic Harari |
| Cast | Guillermo Toledo, Marián Aguilera, María Botto, Fernando Ramallo and Norma Aleandro |
| Running Time | 86 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 843602757107 |
| Buy this item ... | 2 new from $28.98, 1 used from $28.98 |
About Seres queridos
Spain released, PAL/Region 2 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada. Languages:o English (subtitles) o Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1) Synopsis:A mismatched couple discovers that whatever can go wrong will go wrong during a family visit in this comedy. Leni (Marian Aguilera) is a television reporter from a Jewish family in Spain. One weekend, Leni drops by her family's home for a visit, with her new boyfriend, college professor Rafi (Guillermo Toledo), in tow. Rafi is more than a bit nervous about meeting Leni's family -- chronically nervous mother Gloria (Norma Aleandro), blustery father Ernesto (Mario Martin), dance-student sister Tania (Mara Botto), straight-laced bother David (Fernando Ramallo), and addled grandfather Dudu (Max Berliner). But Leni quickly makes matters worse when she announces to her family, who are waiting for Ernesto to return from work, that Rafi just happens to be Palestinian. Matters become a bit tense after that, and while joking with Leni with a block of frozen soup in the kitchen, Rafi accidentally drops the package out the window -- hitting a man on the head who might be Ernesto.-This film is an interesting comedy that explores all the differences between Palestinian and Jewish people creating several situations that make not only people laugh but also think about how close these cultures are in fact. The story begins when Leni, a Jewish girl, decides to introduce his fiancée, a Palestinian boy, to her family. After being shortly shocked with these news, Leni's mother decides to support their wedding, blessing their engagement. Then, an accident caused by Rafi gives rise to several comic situations that will keep you laughing all the time. Special Features:o Filmographieso Interactive Menuo Making Ofo Scene Accesso Trailer(s) Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Only human |
| "Can't We All Just Get Along!" |
Dealing with the Palestinian/Israeli equation is touchy at the best of times, but laughing at it is something most probably don't even think about.
When an Israeli Jew brings home her fiancé, it's usually a time for celebration. So when Leni (Marian Aguilera, THE RECKONING), the daughter of a nice Jewish family, brings home her future husband, one would think it'll spark smiles and joy. But Leni's man Rafi (Guillermo Toledo) shows up on her parents' doorstep with her and we immediately know there are going to be ...uh ...problems. He's a Palestinian and he's ducking into the den of a practicing Jewish family.
Usually this type of set up would spark dramatic elements but here we're given a hilarious take on one family and how they come to grips with their daughter's choice. Not only that, but Rafi has to come to terms with an accident that may have killed Leni's father.
Getting ready for dinner, Rafi is introduced to this rather wacky family. There's the nymphomaniac sister, a blind, gun-toting grandfather, the overly-religious brother, and the protective mother. Leni's father is supposed to show up for the dinner but is late for some reason. Leni's younger sister (the nympho) believes their father is having an affair, but only Rafi really knows what may have happened to him. While taking the evening's soup out of the freezer, Rafi accidentally drops it out the kitchen window, and the frozen block falls several stories before landing on someone's head; Leni's dad? No. It couldn't be, could it? Now another Palestinian has possibly killed a Jew, this time with a new weapon!
Rafi and Leni must contend with their own inherent prejudices while trying to save their future, and prevent the evening from disintegrating into a quagmire of misunderstandings.
The comedy is both in the dialogue and physical. Rafi tries to find out what's happening to the man below who's head was bashed by the frozen soup. He goes into the bathroom and peers out its window. In the meantime, Leni's grandfather (blind) lumbers in to take a pee, and Rafi gets into an unusual position on the toilet in order to avoid being discovered by Grandpa.
This is a refreshing story that brings high marks for comedy into a realm not normally reserved for such things. The only downside is that the dialogue is sometimes rapid and for those who don't speak Spanish (the movie was shot in Spain), it's often times difficult to read the subtitles and keep up with the action onscreen. Otherwise this is an excellent flick. March 28, 2007
| The Gun in the First Act |
Rafi, the Palestinian, has to meet the fiancee's Jewish family: the neurotic mother, the shell-shocked grandpa, the nymphomaniac sister, the faddishly-Orthodox teenage brother, and the baby sister, who is the sole witness to an act of terrorism that involves a block of frozen soup falling from a third-story window onto a hapless passer-by. Grandpa, meanwhile, demonstrates that even though he is blind and half-deaf, he can still load a rifle in record time.
The question propelling the plot is, "Where's Papa?" Insecurities among the characters gather steadily into a perfect storm that swirls with sight gag after brilliant sight gag. I don't want to give away the ending, but let's just say it involves projectile vomiting, a chase to Dad's office, lovers caught in flagrante delicto, and a convalescent baby duck gone missing. Oh, and, true to Chekhov's Law, the firearm introduced in the beginning goes off in the Third Act, with hilarious consequences.
The antics are well-supported by a score reminiscent of Nino Rota's best work for Fellini. Guillermo Toledo, as Rafi, is a stand-out, even among this wonderful cast--his face registers the comic pain of a man who has been cast in a role he cannot escape. The harder he tries, the more he reinforces the stereotypes he must somehow cope with.
Howard Hawks, director of some of the best American screwball comedies, once summed up the definition of a good film in six words: "Three great scenes; no bad scenes." I nicked one star from my rating for a scene that almost violates the second clause. Still, no movie in recent memory has made me laugh so hard and so often, and for that all is forgiven. January 18, 2007
| Human Behavior |
In Only Human, the nervous fiancé, Rafi, is caught in a variety of compromising positions as he meets his soon-to-be family for the first time, but the tension is based in reality. Rafi is Palestinian, and his fiancée, Leni, is Jewish. When blind grandpa swings his old Israeli army rifle around the room, Rafi has legitimate reason to be fearful if grandpa finds out he's a Muslim. When Rafi accidentally drops a block of frozen soup out the window, it might be his lover's dad he snuffed out on the sidewalk below. Only the lightness of the film, the believable reactions of the characters and the understandable craziness of the Jewish Spanish family keep these moments from becoming nerve-racking.
Audiences will believe mom's changing emotions, dad's heck of a concussion, Rafi's palpable nervousness, and the sibling rivalry between Leni and her prettier sister that blooms into a fight of break-up proportions by film's end. Audiences will believe Leni's newly religious brother would put a duck in the toilet.
Only Human is only held back from great success on DVD because it's not in English. Here's hoping audiences will give subtitles a chance for this one.
DVD Extras: None.
-- Brendan Howard
October 31, 2006
| Only Hilarious! |
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