Longing Souls (2020) Poster

(2020)

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10/10
It will bewitch you from the first image!
CINEMA_Co1 March 2021
Taking an important topic as a reference, Montenegro used it as a starting point for describing a matriarchal saga, a feminine universe escalated on different generations that will enlight us with their stories, rituals and daily endearing activities.

The house as a microcosm draws an aura composed of the landscape of the bodies, the rituals and prophecies, smooth camera moves and musical notes bringing us from Isabel Allende touch and Federico García Lorca traces, to Lucrecia Martel sharpness. With just one film, this debutant director already puts her name aside referencial filmmakers such as Dominga Sotomayor or Milagros Mumenthaler.

We discover this world through the eyes of the young Camila, a debutant that leads a cast consisting of 'naturals' and professional actresses who make the film escape severity with humouristic breathes in an apparently claustrophobic environment. With a richer palette than expected from a film set in a house, "Longing Souls" is a delicate and intimate portrait of femininity, complex, rich and full of hints lead by the performances of enchanting (and cursed) women that will bewitch you from the first image.

Javier García Puerto - Programmer, PÖFF Black Nights Film Festival Tallinn
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10/10
There is a real hope that this film asserts Montenegro as a fresh new voice in South American cinema.
cinemaproductora26 April 2022
Colombian kitchen sink drama is invigorated with a quirky eye for detail - female-led debut feature premieres at the from Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival.

The coming-of-age story is mixed with the old wives tale to excellent effect in Diana Montenegro's debut feature Longing Souls. A slow, quiet and assured effort from Colombia, it expertly examines superstitious women's lives through careful and clever composition and a great eye for the tiny accretion of detail.

Together these women must band together and find a way to live despite their difficulties. Longing Souls really looks at these ladies, providing a feminist portrait that stays true to itself throughout.

While looking on the outset like a kitchen sink drama, this is not your run-of-the-mill arthouse film. Instead director Diana Montenegro imbues the film with a quirky eye for composition; often employing planimetric shots and horizontal pans to give the old house an immersive feel. Yet she is not slavishly devoted to her style, knowing when to cut to a close or medium shot in order to enhance a particular scene. Still we rarely leave this expertly constructed-space, Montenegro draping the entire film in a Beguiled-like atmosphere; filled with white, flowing clothes, billowing curtains and natural candlelight.

This old-timey aesthetic compliments the many superstitious rituals we see throughout the film: from covering your face with oatmeal, rubbing yourself with stones while repeating mantras, saying the name of Jesus Christ 1000 times, and cracking an egg into a glass of water. Montenegro views these strange liturgic moments without judgement, providing a fascinating insight into how Catholicism and superstition can often be so easily interlinked.

Using a mostly amateur cast, the film balances this stylised approach with fine naturalistic and lived-in performances. Montenegro is not afraid to simply let domestic scenes play out, focusing on the bodies of these women and their relation to the space around them. With moments that are alternately sad, funny and often downright strange, we really get a sense of who these people are; leading up to a pitch-perfect final scene that doesn't betray the carefully laid groundwork of the film's previous moments.

Scored to a variety of old-school Colombian pop songs, Longing Souls manages to stay dreamy and touching despite its dark subject matter. It's affirming to see Argentinean legend Lucrecia Martel as one of the film advisors; with her stewardship, there is a real hope that this film asserts Montenegro as a fresh new voice in South American cinema.

Longing Souls plays as part the First Feature Competition at Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival, running from 13th to 29th November, 2020.

Redmond Bacon - Dirty Movies.
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