Satanás (2007) Poster

(2007)

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8/10
Convincing tales of descent into madness
TdSmth521 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Satanas (Satan) begins with a women confessing in church, she is worried because she can't provide food for her children. The priest offers to get some food for them. When he returns with food they are all gone. The next time he sees her, she's in church at the foot of a statue of St. Michael and covered in blood. She tells him that she has freed her children.

Then we meet Eliseo a lonely penniless man who finds refuge in literature. He was a former soldier for the US, at times seems generous but perhaps his generosity is because he is just impatient with people. He's a hygiene-freak, constantly cleaning himself with hand sanitizer. He lives with his mom but their relationship is just about hurting each other verbally in every exchange they have. He plays chess regularly but doesn't want to talk to his partner. He spends a lot of time in libraries and gets along well with a librarian who calls him "doctor", who respects him and isn't nosy. He is also a private English tutor and tutors a beautiful well-to-do teen girl.

Our third main character is an attractive woman who sells coffee in a large central meat and produce market. She seems depressed, she's better than the people she has to deal with: butchers, produce sellers. One day she is approached by two sleazy guys with a business proposition. The deal is that she will go out to clubs, hook up with a guy, get him drugged so that her business partners can rob him. In exchange she gets a cut of the money and to live in a nice apartment. At first this makes her sick, but eventually she enjoys as she also becomes close to one of her partners.

For the most part all these stories are unconnected but all these characters undergo a deep transformation. The priest visits the infanticidal mother in jail, but she is drawn to evil- pasting her cell wall with newspaper articles of atrocities, she tries to seduce the priest, and reads biblical passages that makes reference to the devil.

The priest in turn is having an affair with the church maid and decides to leave the priesthood for her.

The attractive woman ends up one day raped by a taxi driver and his associate and she decides she wants ultimate revenge.

And Eliseo transformation is more of a slow descent into madness. He is anti-social and good-natured. But his good nature is tested again and again forcing him to leave it behind. He becomes much more confrontational and downright misanthropic. One day he locks himself up in his room to read Jeckyll and Hyde. When he comes out he is transformed. He doesn't put up with annoyances anymore. He takes his gun, some ammo, then withdraws all the money out from his bank. He pays a visit to everyone he knows. Then he walks into a restaurant. Other patrons include the former priest and his lover, the rape victim who know is a server at the restaurant.

At the end we find out that this movie is based on a novel about a real life massacre that took place years ago in Colombia.

This movie is quite good. All the stories are believable and well acted. The pace slows down quite a bit when it comes to Eliseo's story, but that is because he is seemingly such a measured and calculating man. But inside trouble was brewing. The portrayal of his madness is pretty good. He is an introvert. He doesn't scream and make scenes. He absorbs it all into himself until one day he can't take it anymore.

Overall, a very good and enjoyable movie. A success for Colombian film-making. I didn't know the background of it or where it would go so it was very interesting to see how it all turned out. The music is good, it keeps things tense. The cinematography is well done also. While it may seem the stories are disconnected, they are not insofar as all these people become someone they are not. It may seem that their coming together at the end is forced. At the same time, if you think about it and were to pick some people from a restaurant and follow their lives, you may find something akin to what this movie shows.
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7/10
This film could be better!!!
spinoff754 May 2009
Why I say this film could be better??? Well... it's based on a book: "Satanas" by Mario Mendoza... but the book it's based in one of the worst spree killing ever. Before Columbine, in 1987 there was a man called Campoelías Delgado who entered in a restaurant and kill the customers at the tables. The man was a former soldier in the Korea War, mentally ill and a tickin' bomb. Before kill the people in that restaurant, he burned his mother and shoot the neighbors in the building he lived... nobody knows if he kills himself with a shot in the head or died in the crossfire with the police... but it's a raw good story for a movie. But, I don't know... I haven't read the book, but the movie focuses in other minor characters whom don't worth it. The plot is in the head of Eliseo (played by the great actor Damian Alcazar, who is the only Mexican actor who can talk without that ugly accent)and his madness... I don't care about an illegitimate relationship between a priest and his fellow parishioner girl or the vengeance for a rape. It would be more like it if the movie could show HOW and WHY Eliseo hit the rock bottom.
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6/10
Beautitul production. Good work.
halfcolombian8 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
WARNING MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS

About a Colombian "Travis Bickle" wandering around the streets of Bogotá and getting more and more upset about how people treat him and the "filth" he sees everywhere. Both "taxi driver" and "falling down" comes to mind, although this is loosely based on real events. It is portrayed almost as though the director feels some kind of sympathy for the killer. I enjoyed it a lot. This is a good Colombian movie on par with European and American ones. The actor who plays the leading role is very good, and most of the acting is good. (except the guy who plays the raping cabdriver, what an over-actor!) It's beautifully shot and it's a stylish production. I would have liked it to be longer and with more characters. On the cover it said 132 minutes, it ended up being 1 hour and 32 minutes which is not the same thing. I found some of the scenes accidentally humorous, like when he threatens his neighbor for bugging him about the collection. And the story about the priest. As a swede living in Colombia I find this country often overly religious. People can't talk about ordinary things without having to drag God into it. I guess I'm a believer myself but I would never mention God as excessively as they do over here. Everything is "Gods will", even the most trivial things. It was a bit refreshing to see a Colombian movie that dared to criticize priests or people claiming to be religious. You CAN actually be a believer without being a fanatic. Anyway that was maybe a bit off topic but all in all it was an entertaining movie. I give it 6 out of 10. (for being Colombian I could give it 8 out of 10). I hope Colombians will keep up the good work and make more quality productions like this.
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More than just a movie...
andrewmjudge23 January 2009
I did not know anything about this movie or the book it was based on until today. My brother's former wife emailed me that me she saw a powerful Colombian movie about a ex-Vietnam vet who goes on a killing spree. Not until the end of the movie did she realize what she was watching was the murder of my cousin Roberto Montes and his girlfriend. Of course she was completely rattled.

Roberto was a wonderful young man and adored by his family. Especially since he was the only boy in the family of three sisters. He had just finished graduate school and had dreams of embarking on his career and I imagine marrying the woman he loved. Tragically the night they were killed they were celebrating their birthday which they shared.

It was a truly horrifying time and I am not sure if I will ever see the movie. We glorify the killers and forget the victims.

Lisa Ackel Judge
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6/10
Good Achievement for Colombian cinema
moralesduarte282 June 2007
I saw the movie yesterday, and I was amused. Not only for the theme the movie talks about, but because in many technical aspects, is a very well done movie. Although it fails in some photographic issues ( blurs en wide shots, close ups, etc), it is pretty descent. The sound design is very well achieved. In a thematic point of view, I agree with the user that commented before me, it's a universal theme, it could happen in any place of the world. It is not only meant to be referred as a Colombian reality issue. Loneliness, evil, lust, revenge, hatred, are human emotions or feelings, that doesn't have boundaries, humans feel them. In a way, some Colombian audience may find this movie "anti-colombiana", because most of the Colombian people are used to watch shallow Colombian movies, and when reality in a way hits them, they cannot stand it and that's why movies like this one, are criticized. When a movie evokes emotions, passions and most of all, reflection, is a movie that is to be seen. Personally this movie evoked all of these in me. It's a movie to be watched.
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6/10
Dr. Jeckyl & Mr. Hyde
johno-2124 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film at the 2008 Palm Springs International Film Festival. This is the debut film from director Andrés Baiz who also adapted the screenplay from the novel by Mario Mendoza. Mendoza actually knew the killer Campo Elias Delgado and wrote the novel drawn from his killing spree. In 1986 Delagdo was a 52 year Columbian Vietnam Vet living in Bogota and working as an English Tutor. He was said to be someone who hated violence and lived with his elderly mother in an apartment building and had a fascination with the novel Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde. One day he went on a killing spree that left 23 dead and 15 wounded. There is a the good and bad in most of the principal characters we follow in this dramatized story. Paola (Marcela Mar) is a beautiful vendor at a street market is enlisted by nefarious acquaintances to become a woman who frequents bars with wealthy patrons and she drugs their drinks so her associates can rob them. She eventually becomes a victim her self and is faced with a decision of life or death in retaliation. Father Ernesto (Blas Jaramillio) is a priest who is having second thoughts about his vows as he lusts for the parish's beautiful housekeeper. After a poor parishioner with three hungry children commits an unthinkable act he finds that she made an ultimate choice and rather than accepting help has made another choice of slipping further into madness. The once helpful Ernesto sees an evil side to himself when confronted by a panhandler. Natalia (Martina Garcia) is a 15 year old daughter of wealthy parents who is being tutor in English by Elisio (Damián Alcázar). Natalia is an innocent that Elisio is attracted to but he resents the wealth she is brought up in and her family and friends. Elisio hates his mother and his neighbors and refuses to contribute to a neighborhood charity to help the poor and needy. He has no friends except for the librarian at the university. He is nicknamed Doc by some who know that he was once a medic in Vietnam but Dr. Jeckyl is rapidly and irreversibly becoming Mr. Hyde. This film is filled with protracted violence and as for it's English subtitle Profile of a Killer, it is less a profile of the killer as much as a story of the other characters who have nothing to do with his story until late in the film. This film is a poor choice for Columbia's official entry as Best Foreign Language Film to the Academy Awards and I would have to believe the country has better to offer. This film is certainly not for everybody and I wouldn't recommend it to a general audience. There are some good acting performances here but there is so much you would want to change about this film that I can only give it a 6.5 out of 10.
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9/10
Descent into Hell
Dilated_Aperture5 March 2007
I just saw the world premier last night at the Miami International Film Festival with my wife. From the opening scene, I had the feeling that things were only going to get worse. This is the story of several people in Bogota, Columbia, set in the mid-1980's. It follows each of them into what I can only describe as a descent into hell, climaxing in a convergence of their worlds with an ending that will stay with viewer for a long time.

This film has a sense of realism that reminds me of other films such as Amores Perros and City of God (Cidade de Deus). There are some very graphic scenes of violence and there may be some who are offended, as it decidedly breaks many taboos. The name is Satanás, meaning Satan, so do not delude yourself into thinking there are any high or happy moments. The tagline reads 'Every city has its demons'; believe it.

In spite of it's dark subject matter, the film is still very effective. There are some weaknesses, mostly from a technical standpoint, but the story is strong enough to make up for these. The other weakness is that the film rambles on for a while, so the viewer is not quite sure where the story is going, or even if it is going to end abruptly. But the director and writer had a purpose, and that is to bring us to the end. The climax brings everything into strong focus, and you see that the rambling is, in effect, the build-up.

I believe this film has universal appeal. This film could have been shot in any major city in the world. In fact, the director did such a good job in filming this, that I forgot where the movie was taking place. I gave it the highest vote in the audience award, and this film deserves to win it.
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10/10
An impressive film from first time filmmaker
tcdonahue-129 April 2008
SATANÁS is a very controlled, mature film, but not for the faint of heart. It's definitely a film to digest slowly, because it deals with such a powerful subject matter: human nature. It is a thought provoking film (it grows with you day by day) even though I can see how it polarizes audiences - some love it and some hate it (because it can be disturbing). It is undeniable that the filmmakers did a wonderful job in building up the tension; the last 30 minutes of the film are absolutely brilliant. Even though the three stories seem at first hand to be unconnected, they are not. The three characters are battling with internal demons and it is through all of them that the thesis of the film is manifested. I want to add that the cast is impressive.
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9/10
Commentary on society
SpannersGerm6697 July 2014
To start off with, this movie isn't for the faint of heart. This is a raw portrayal in what society has become. How some of us can be put on the outer, how we feel like we don't fit in, and what someone will do once all the frustration has come to boiling point.

This is a very scary film. Its from the perspective of three characters, whose stories ultimately intertwine in a very tragic finale. A War veteran English teacher who lives with his mother and feels like he has no purpose. A young female who works for a syndicate who specialize in robbing men at nightclubs, and a priest who is disillusioned with the life he has chosen.

None of these stories are feel good, but feel to have much more of a purpose than simply depressing the audience. Brilliant performances from the actors allow the viewer to invest time in their dilemmas, that most can relate to.

The inevitable time bomb is what makes you feel that the whole experience is tragic, but a message that can't be ignored, especially in a world where these sorts of tragedies happen far too often!

Brilliant cinema that everyone should check out!
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1/10
Satanás insults my intelligence and my artistic taste, and my desire to be at awe in front of a work of art.
garciamarcela7 June 2007
As a Colombian proud of my country, I find it depressing and pathetic that most Colombian films have nothing to show but the most horrible human atrocities without any artistic purpose to back them up. Both the author of the book, on which the movie is based, and the director, demonstrate their absolute inability to reach the public without using morbid and sickening situations where human compassion or any redeeming qualities are completely inexistent. On top of the fact that the book is based on a horrifying real story that took place in Bogotá 21 years ago, the author adds upsetting characters and situations (including one of the most horrible rape scenes I have ever seen, children murdered by their own mother, child molestation, kidnapping, robbing, prostitution, street and domestic violence, etc, etc, etc.) that are made up and not connected to the real story, and fulfill no artistic purpose. The director does not use one of the most interesting qualities of cinematography, which is its capacity to "suggest" ideas or emotions, without having to show "literally" every single detail of those horrible situations. There is no artistic complexity in this film and the connections between the characters are absolutely arbitrary. I am no baby for violent or grotesque films in fact I admire and respect many movies that are very violent (say Pulp Fiction for example) because there is more to it than just the crude situations. Satanás insults my intelligence and my artistic taste, and my desire to be at awe in front of a work of art.
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9/10
THERE... BUT FOR THE GRACE OF GOD!.....
Tony-Kiss-Castillo19 January 2024
SATANAS, probably more than any other film I have ever seen in my life, really hit close to home...LITERALLY!

BUT.... BEFORE DIVING IN.....

FIRST... Let us FOCUS on the Title´s content and context:

Why do I say HIT CLOSE TO HOME??? Well, this based on true events film, is about the massacre that occurred in the Pozzetto restaurant in Chapinero, Bogota, Colombia, on December 4th, 1986. To be precise, the restaurant is on the corner of the Carrera Septima (7th) and Calle 62. My mother lived in an apartment not more than 2 blocks from the Pozzetto. It was, perhaps, my Mom's (May she R. I. P.) default setting restaurant! We had eaten there on numerous occasions, both before and after the horrendous 1986 deed!

Yes, despite the gruesome massacre there, where 20 people were killed, the place is still open for business, and actually boasts both a rather brisk clientele and a relatively solid image and reputation! Every time I think of the place, it occurs to me just how lucky my Mom, my wife and I were that we had not decided to eat there that fateful evening.....There.... But for the grace of God....!!!

O. K...About the film: SATANAS is awesome! This has to be one of the 5 best Colombian films ever made! Well, Colombian-Slash-Mexican film, anyway...(As listed on IMDb!)

In the leading role of "SATAN", is Mexican actor Damian Alcazar, who gives us an eerily haunting performance as a tormented Colombian who did two active tours of duty with the U. S. army in Vietnam. He is obviously suffering from PTSD...but he was mustered out of the military and left the U. S. long before anyone was officially diagnosed, or much less, received any treatment for this condition. Alcazar's Colombian accent is spot on!... So much so that if I had not known he was Mexican, I would have assumed he was Colombian! (If Spanish is Your Native Language, you'll undoubtedly notice!)

You can really feel the mounting pressure Delgado (Alcazar's character) exerts on himself leading up to his total implosion. Teresa Gutierrez, who passed in 2010, was excellent as the rather overbearing, but concerned and clueless, mother, Blanca. Gutierrez is probably known to everyone in Colombia over 20, but is pretty much unknown outside of Colombia.

The Director, Andres Baiz, who hails from CALI, oís!... In his directorial debut...despite overseeing and putting together a truly outstanding Colombian film, has only gotten the directorial nod again on 2 occasions: La Cara Oculta (2011) and ROA (2013)! It is impossible for me to wrap my head around this situational anomaly! Does this penalizing directors for making excellent films only happen in Colombia? Two other examples come to mind...Francisco Norden, after directing Condores No Entierran Todos los Dias in 1984, was not given another shot for 21 years! And Felipe Aljure, who directed La Gente de la Universal in 1991, was denied another turn until 2005!

It seems the rest of the cast is Colombian and they do a fine job, perhaps with a couple exceptions. It is worth noting the cultural impact of this tragedy in Colombia. If you ask people here to name one example of a mass shooting where a deranged lone gunman walks into a public place and begins shooting total strangers randomly and indiscriminately, if the person can provide one example, and most people certainly can, "The Pozetto Massacre", will, undoubtedly, be it! In the USA, it is rare that a SINGLE MONTH goes by without a crime of this nature!!! Considering that Colombia, in general terms, is a country that definitely has much more violent crime than the U. S., I think it is no coincidence that practically the only random mass shooting, not rooted in some sort of group or personal vendetta, involves a Colombian with PTSD who served in Vietnam with the U. S. Military! This fact really needs to be studied extremely carefully!

SATANAS is a must see movie for many different people for a myriad of different reasons! 9********* Stars!

ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA!

Any comments, questions or observations, in English o en Español, are most welcome!
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10/10
20/10
cosmin74200029 May 2020
Another spanish language masterpiece from the director Andrés Baiz, inspired by true events who keep your breath taken until the end.
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5/10
Disappointed, to say the least..
im_barely_breathing17 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I had to watch this film for my Latin American film class the other day. At first, I thought it had the appearance of a well budgeted, well filmed movie with a lot of potential. Although it was obvious mostly bad things were to come, I was excited to see what was going to happen next. The three stories slowly built themselves up, peaked my interest and then the movie took a turn for the worse.

The climax seemed clumsy, too many parts falling together too quickly, too loosely. Rape scenes typically turn my stomach and this one wasn't the worst I've ever seen, but it appeared unnecessarily long and graphic. I thought it would have been more interesting to explore WHY Eliseo was so affected by the War. Instead, the movie HINTED at that and was inartistically blatant with everything else.

Finding out that this movie was based on a true story was one of the only redeeming qualities about it, for me of course. It is always interesting for a film, especially Latin American, to question the sanctity of the church, but to find out the side stories and their gratuitous violence were absent of the real life story made them lose whatever hint of substance they had.

I also think it's a weak effort to have 3 stories barely intertwined come together at the end with a quick murder scene.

If you haven't seen it, go ahead, it's a good effort but falls short.
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