Native Name: |
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Director: | Patricia Ferreira | ||
Music: | José Nieto | ||
Editing: | Marcela Sáenz | ||
Cinematography: | José Luis Alcaine | ||
Language: | Spanish |
I Know Who You Are (Spanish; Castilian: '''Sé quién eres'''|links=no) is a 2000 Spanish-Argentine psychological thriller drama film directed by Patricia Ferreira which stars Ana Fernández and Miguel Ángel Solá along with Roberto Enríquez, Ingrid Rubio, and Manuel Manquiña.
Just settled in Galicia, psychiatric doctor Paloma kindles with Mario, a charming patient who has developed a Korsakoff syndrome in the wake of substance abuse and some moot traumatic event occurred towards 1977 (a key year of the Spanish Transition), being unable to remember anything from that point on. She goes to great lengths to unlock Mario's repressed memories, and protect him from people chasing him. Mario is revealed to be a mercenary and hired executioner, involved in a terrorist attack against military officers investigating the army's anti-democratic pustchist plots from the inside.
The screenplay was penned by Patricia Ferreira and Enrique Jiménez, with the collaboration of Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón, based on an original story by and Daniela Fejerman.[1] A Spanish-Argentine co-production, the film was produced by Continental Producciones, Tornasol Films, and Zarlek Producciones.
The film screened in the 'Panorama' section of the 50th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2000. It was theatrically released in Spain on 7 April 2000.[2]
Ángel Fernández-Santos of El País assessed that Ferreira takes the reins of that "good script" with strength and clarity, "multiplying it" by virtue of her "remarkable filmmaking craft and instincts" and her "exquisite understanding with the actors", who nail their performances.[3]
Derek Elley of Variety deemed Ferreira's "inauspicious feature debut" to be "a wannabe psychological thriller that just gets sillier as it progresses".[4]
The review in La Nación gave the film a so-so rating (Spanish; Castilian: regular), considering that, while "being neither a bad film nor an artistic nonsense" and offering a handful of good scenes, technical values, and Ana Fernández's acting solvency notwithstanding, the film is dragged by its slips, inaccuracies and certain unplausible denouements.[5]
|-| rowspan = "3" align = "center" | 2001 || rowspan = "3" | 15th Goya Awards || Best New Director || Patricia Ferreira || || rowspan = "3" | |-| Best Actor || Miguel Ángel Solá || |-| Best Original Score || José Nieto || |}