Santoalla Explained

Santoalla
Director:Andrew Becker
Daniel Mehrer[1]
Producer:Christina de la Torre
Dave O'Connor
Justin Wilkes
Jeremy Cohan
Paul Mehrer
John Bertuzzi
Josh Russ Tupper
Cinematography:Andrew Becker
Daniel Mehrer
Editing:Andrew Becker
Studio:Oscilloscope Films
Runtime:83 minutes
Language:English
Galician

Santoalla is a 2016 documentary film about the deterioration in neighbor relations in a small Spanish village.

Synopsis

Spanning over several decades, Santoalla tells the story of the Dutch couple Margo Pool and her husband Martin Verfondern as they settle into a village known as Santoalla (also written as Santa Eulalia) in the remote mountainous region of Galicia in northwest Spain.

The village, largely abandoned and slowly crumbling into ruins, gradually comes to be occupied by only one other family, the Rodríguezes. At first amicable, tensions begin to rise between the two families as disputes over land usage, cultural differences, and misinterpreted intentions culminate into the mysterious disappearance of Martin Verfondern in 2010. Intertwined with newsreel footage, archival video montages, and interviews with Pool herself, the documentary shifts between the past and “present”, showcasing the progression in the relationship between the neighbors culminating in a tragic end.

Production and release

The film was produced by Radical Media and distributed by the indie distribution company Oscilloscope. Directors Andrew Becker and Daniel Mehrer were heavily involved in the creative process while producing.[2]

The film first premiered June 17, 2016. It was released to streaming services on July 9, 2017 and limited screenings in theatres on July 19, 2017.

Reception

Santoalla received largely positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported an 85% approval rating with an average rating of 7.9/10 based on 100+ reviews.[3]

Neil Young of The Hollywood Reporter described Santoalla as "A quietly absorbing true-crime tale" and wrote that "handling nearly all key creative duties between them, Becker and Mehrer have crafted a solid, even-handed survey of their chosen material, allowing viewers access to a beautiful, damply verdant, enticingly tumbledown corner of Europe." Kennet Turan of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film is "Nominally focused on one man's mysterious disappearance, Santoalla is really concerned with cultures in collision, with what happens when dreams of paradise clash, good intentions become unhinged and the darker angels of our nature gain the upper hand." He noted that "Santoalla is a strong addition to the group" of similar documentaries.[4]

Awards and nominations

!Award!Year!Category!Recipient(s) and Nominee(s)!Result
Austin Film Festival2016Documentary FeatureAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerWon
Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema2017Best Feature FilmAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerNominated
Cleveland International Film Festival2017Best DocumentaryAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerNominated
Lighthouse International Film Festival2017Best DocumentaryAndrew Becker and Danile MehrerWon
Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Film Festival2017Best DocumentaryAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerNominated
Salem Film Fest, US2017Best EditingAndrew BeckerWon
Cervino Cinemountain Film Festival2017Best Foreign FilmAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerWon
Tallgrass Film Festival2016Outstanding Documentary FeatureAndrew Becker and Daniel MehrerWon

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Santoalla. 1021282544. 2021-10-08.
  2. Web site: Young. Neil. 2016-07-03. ‘Santoalla’: Edinburgh Review. 2021-10-11. The Hollywood Reporter. en-US.
  3. Web site: Santoalla. en. 2021-10-08 . Rotten Tomatoes.
  4. Web site: 2017-07-27. Review: A couple's dreams of paradise turn tragic in the unsettling Santoalla. 2021-10-08. Los Angeles Times. en-US.