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Mondays in the Sun

Mondays in the Sun (2002)

September. 27,2002
|
7.5
| Drama Comedy

After the closure of their shipyard in Northern Spain, a few former workers: Santa, José, Lino, Amador, Sergei and Reina keep in touch. They meet mainly at a bar owned by their former colleague Rico. Santa is the most superficially confident and unofficial leader of the group. A court case hangs over him relating to a shipyard lamp he smashed during a protest against the closure. José is bitter that his wife, Ana, is employed when he is not.

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shashank pawar
2002/09/27

The story-line of movie focus beautifully on life aspects of common man who finds way to survive in urban life. Good direction and very artistically performed characters all round. Real life aspects are nicely covered with human values and touch of behavioral approach towards broken workers with no jobs. This is inspiring to any young or mid age personal who finds difficult to keep up in work and personal life when you are broke. The story-line of movie focus beautifully on life aspects of common man who finds way to survive in urban life. Good direction and very artistically performed characters all round. Real life aspects are nicely covered with human values and touch of behavioral approach towards broken workers with no jobs. This is inspiring to any young or mid age personal who finds difficult to keep up in work and personal life when you are broke.

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ektorxxi
2002/09/28

This is one of the best film I've ever seen. People who has lived this kind of problem (no job and no hope to get it) will thank Fernando Leon de Aranoa for making this realistic portrait of this hard situation. I don't think that just Ken Loach can do this kind of social movies (even if I like him very much too). Spanish cinema, less known than British, has always reflected our social problems and didn't need to copy foreigners directors. And if we talk about influences I prefer to mention the Italian neorealism long time ago. If you liked this movie you will also love a french movie called "Ressources humaines" not as known as Ken Loach's but excellent too. Thanks to Fernando Leon.

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Nick Dets
2002/09/29

No film has ever captured the depression and delight of the ordinary working man as realistically as "Mondays in the Sun". Watching it brought me back to the gray days of growing up when I would see my father's tired face and wonder what joy he can possibly be getting that pulls him through the pressure filled, cold and seemingly endless cycle of working hard day in, day out.Javier Bardem plays the not-ever-to-be-defeated Santa, a strong-willed, but down on his luck guy who just got laid off from a comfortable job at a shipyard. He takes refuge in a buddy's bar with all his friends/co-workers who share the same misfortune. On top of all the problems anchoring him down, Santa must pay a hefty fine for destroying a light by the shipyard. For one week, he tries to run from these injustices and bothers, and he sojourns with his dreams.What director Fernando Leon de Aranoa understands is that no matter how much joy we can have in a given amount of time, there is always the weight of work and responsibility to come back to. In the dreary life of the working man, things gets so routine that the magic of being young and having dreams is lost and gone forever. Aranoa's characters are all faced with the joy and bad luck of being unemployed. In this short time of pressure and paradise, they find escape and salvation in what seems like a limbo of meaninglessness. One of the film's best characters is a surreal, random friend of someone in the group who claims he was once an astronaut. By looking into his starry eyes, it is easy for the viewer to understand that this group of people have all found release in dreaming about getting to leave the earth as well.It may not amount to the world, but I loved "Mondays in the Sun" because it knows the ordinary joys and pains of those struggling in the lower or middle class. What is truly beautiful about this film is how all of the characters seem at their most desperate, but somehow there is the assurance that maybe the light is not out forever.(3 out of 4)

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dutchtom1
2002/09/30

Quentin Crisp once stated that when things are shown too beautifully, one is a romantic. When things are show unbearably grim, they are realistic. And when something gets the ironic treatment, they're spot on. Unfortunately for Leon de Aranoa, he falls into the second catagory. This director has obviously tried too hard to make a Spanish "Ken Loach" type movie, without being able to capture the comedy, and warmth between the characters, that elevate Loach movies from merely being 'depressing'. Los Lunes al Sol, is just that, only depressing. Things are unrealistically grim. The characters ultimate moments of misery all reach a climax at the same point, and if the glum story isn't enough, Aranoa washes the tale over with a visually grey and grimy colour palette. The films was ridiculously over-rated at the Goyas. A movie that shows empathy for the weaker citizens in society, in this case unemployed harbour workers, does not automatically make for a good movie, even though I would be the first to sympathize with the fates of these people. This movie only manages to make me grow disinterested in their fate. In 21st century Spain, unemployed people do not live like beggars, and the public transport ferries have decent restrooms, and it's hard to come across a bar with so few punters and such little happiness to be encountered in it. Leon de Aranoa obviously doesn't have a clue about working class Spain, and does it no favours. Pretentious is the only conclusion I can draw. The scene where the men watch a football match for free, has been directly copied from a film which deals much more 'realistically' with the subject of the 'poverty' trap, namely "Purely Belter," which is afar more engaging, humorous, and yet sad.

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