5/10
The aftermath of the Spanish Civil War
18 October 2023
The Falangist party in Spain was the local version of Fascism. Its emblem (the yoke and arrows) was clearly copied from fascist iconography. However, Falangism was a lot more retrograde even than Fascism, and its purpose was to turn Spain back into its feudal period. Falangists practiced an awesome cult of violencee. The party was too extreme even for dictator Francisco Franco; after the Civil War the Falange's influence in government steadily declined.

Rogelio is a low grade foot soldier of a Falange death squad in the town of Getxo, in the Basque Country, a few miles from Bilbao. The squad rounds up and murders Republicans tipped off by locals (sometimes to resolve old feuds or to lay hands on the victim's property). He is respected not even by his squad comrades. To gain their recognition he leads the squad to murder in cold blood the local schoolteacher and his 16 year old son. At this point his life changes. He undergoes an emotional turmoil. He fears that the teacher's second son, 10 years old at the time will eventually take revenge on him. Driven by superstition rather than religion he believes that doing certain things in a certain order (as in Tarkovsky's Nostalghia and The Sacrifice) will somehow have a spiritual meaning or influence his life. His antics are confused by the locals with true repentance.

I was unable to raise any empathy for Rogelio. He is a repulsive character, and remains so until the last frame; years after the Civil War he is still unrepentant, loyal to his co-assassins of the death squad and subservient to its sadistic leader. That ruined the movie for me. On the positive side, acting is of generally good level and cinematography captures perfectly the verdant hills and valleys of the Basque country and its melancholic cloudy skies.
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