4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- A beautiful soundtrack for a good realistic movie., 19 December 2004
Author:
kitie7 from Gibraltar
A good look at the delinquency in Spain of the 80's, good photography,
great soundtrack.
Pablo, Angela, El Meca and Sebas, four marginalized teenagers from
Madrid are forced to live a life of crime in order to survive and
escape the poverty they live in. The movie is quite entertaining, the
crime scenes are very realistic, the soundtrack fits just perfect and
the message is clear and powerful.
Crime is created by poverty and poverty is created by luxury, something
we are all responsible of.
A great political statement, then and now.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Good document of juvenile delinquency! Some times slow,sometimes fast., 6 November 2003
Author:
kd4kn
A good directed film, based on juvenile delinquency, with a marvelous
photography.Not the best of this genre but its well done and has a great
sound track that explains this world so purely, with the masters of rumba
(Los Chunguitos).The director, influenced by other films like `Perros
Callejeros` used real kids from the streets to give the film a more
realistic touch.The main actor (Jose Antonio Valdelmoro) Pablo in the
film,died two years later the same way as told in the film.
Pablo and Angela are in love,but also they are poor and together with
their
friends El Meca and Sebas they are forced to live a life of crime to
survive
and escape the suburbs of Madrid.The four of them steal cars and plan
armed
robbery`s to earn money,and also as part of the street life they do
drugs.These kids are known as good people among there neighbourhood,but
can
also be violent and very dangerous.Will they live to see their dreams come
true and make it out of this world?Watch this movie and find out!Very
entertaining.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Gorgeous and Sensuous., 17 January 2004
Author:
Prof Lostiswitz
This movie makes beautiful use of Flamenco music, and does it better than
any I've seen. Carlos Saura obviously cares deeply about the medium, as he
also made a movie called Flamenco (although it's just a concert
piece).
The story is very basic; it deals with the adventures of young
street-criminals in Madrid who graduate from car-theft to bank-robbery.
What's interesting is the way Saura makes us care about these "hijos de
nadie", who are kind and decent people 50% of the time, and feel they have
no future in regular society. But the movie never sentimentalizes them -
they do exactly what you'd expect such people to do.
Dialogue is kept to a minimum; a lot of the communication is via the
graceful gestures the Spanish are so good at. This allows extra time for the
soundtrack, and it really gets you into the spirit of the film, which is
really more like dance than acting.
Flamenco originated among the dispossessed, among beggars and gypsies
condemned to live in waste places and junkyards on the edge of town, and the
scenes of the barren housing-projects on the fringes of Madrid really bring
this feeling to life.
Deprisa, Deprisa conveys a better understanding of the spirit of Flamenco
than more elegant movies dedicated to the subject. (And Carlos Saura is a
genius).
The Madrid a tourist might not catch, 29 March 2006
Author:
mgrindberg from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
A group of friends embark on a short and doomed life of crime in Madrid
in the 1970's. Filmed in color in and around Madrid, with some great
locations and a nice flamenco/rock soundtrack, the characters choose to
live dangerously rather than work in deadend jobs. The film seems to be
saying something about society and opportunity, but doesn't get lost in
any sermons. It sticks with the characters up to the inevitable end,
and goes into some out of the way locations, with one scene having them
on horseback and crossing a busy highway. Saura has made a real
portrait out of each of the characters while showing a dusty and not
too pleasant side of Madrid somewhere out in its suburbs.
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Deprisa, deprisa (1981)
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

A beautiful soundtrack for a good realistic movie., 19 December 2004
Author: kitie7 from Gibraltar
A good look at the delinquency in Spain of the 80's, good photography, great soundtrack.
Pablo, Angela, El Meca and Sebas, four marginalized teenagers from Madrid are forced to live a life of crime in order to survive and escape the poverty they live in. The movie is quite entertaining, the crime scenes are very realistic, the soundtrack fits just perfect and the message is clear and powerful.
Crime is created by poverty and poverty is created by luxury, something we are all responsible of.
A great political statement, then and now.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Good document of juvenile delinquency! Some times slow,sometimes fast., 6 November 2003
Author: kd4kn
A good directed film, based on juvenile delinquency, with a marvelous photography.Not the best of this genre but its well done and has a great sound track that explains this world so purely, with the masters of rumba (Los Chunguitos).The director, influenced by other films like `Perros Callejeros` used real kids from the streets to give the film a more realistic touch.The main actor (Jose Antonio Valdelmoro) Pablo in the film,died two years later the same way as told in the film.
Pablo and Angela are in love,but also they are poor and together with their friends El Meca and Sebas they are forced to live a life of crime to survive and escape the suburbs of Madrid.The four of them steal cars and plan armed robbery`s to earn money,and also as part of the street life they do drugs.These kids are known as good people among there neighbourhood,but can also be violent and very dangerous.Will they live to see their dreams come true and make it out of this world?Watch this movie and find out!Very entertaining.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

Gorgeous and Sensuous., 17 January 2004
Author: Prof Lostiswitz
This movie makes beautiful use of Flamenco music, and does it better than any I've seen. Carlos Saura obviously cares deeply about the medium, as he also made a movie called Flamenco (although it's just a concert piece).
The story is very basic; it deals with the adventures of young street-criminals in Madrid who graduate from car-theft to bank-robbery. What's interesting is the way Saura makes us care about these "hijos de nadie", who are kind and decent people 50% of the time, and feel they have no future in regular society. But the movie never sentimentalizes them - they do exactly what you'd expect such people to do.
Dialogue is kept to a minimum; a lot of the communication is via the graceful gestures the Spanish are so good at. This allows extra time for the soundtrack, and it really gets you into the spirit of the film, which is really more like dance than acting.
Flamenco originated among the dispossessed, among beggars and gypsies condemned to live in waste places and junkyards on the edge of town, and the scenes of the barren housing-projects on the fringes of Madrid really bring this feeling to life.
Deprisa, Deprisa conveys a better understanding of the spirit of Flamenco than more elegant movies dedicated to the subject. (And Carlos Saura is a genius).
The Madrid a tourist might not catch, 29 March 2006

Author: mgrindberg from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
A group of friends embark on a short and doomed life of crime in Madrid in the 1970's. Filmed in color in and around Madrid, with some great locations and a nice flamenco/rock soundtrack, the characters choose to live dangerously rather than work in deadend jobs. The film seems to be saying something about society and opportunity, but doesn't get lost in any sermons. It sticks with the characters up to the inevitable end, and goes into some out of the way locations, with one scene having them on horseback and crossing a busy highway. Saura has made a real portrait out of each of the characters while showing a dusty and not too pleasant side of Madrid somewhere out in its suburbs.
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