The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by
An uneven but intriguing piece of whimsy that veers from powerfully symbolic cinematography into self parody.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Portugal, Spain, France · 2010
1h 37m
Director Manoel de Oliveira
Starring Pilar López de Ayala, Leonor Silveira, Filipe Vargas, Ricardo Trêpa
Genre Drama
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Late one night, Isaac is summoned by a wealthy family to take the last photograph of a young bride, Angelica, who mysteriously passed away. Arriving at their estate, Isaac is struck by Angelica's beauty, but when he looks through his lens, something strange happens - the young woman appears to come to life. From that moment, Isaac will be haunted by Angelica day and night.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by
An uneven but intriguing piece of whimsy that veers from powerfully symbolic cinematography into self parody.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The charm of The Strange Case of Angelica lies in the way it balances this mysticism with a thoroughly secular sense of the business of everyday life.
Its stunningly composed images showing how Isaac is himself something of a ghost-given to staring off into the distance, being condescended to by those around him, a man perpetually outside the times. What he needs is to take that one extra step toward his spectral siren; the scene in which he does so might be one of the most exhilarating visions of death's sweet embrace ever filmed.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
This fresh, highly original film, inspired by Oliveira's substantially different, never-filmed 1952 script, has been made with the greatest of ease and simplicity and with drollery and wit, yet its underlying impact is profoundly spiritual.
Village Voice by Nick Pinkerton
de Oliveira's film is a musical of a sort, its quietude occasionally lifted by work songs or chorales.
Too shaggy at times, with digressions into science and history that come out flat and awkward. But there's a sweet, unshakeable poetry in the main idea of the film.
San Francisco Chronicle by Walter Addiego
A captivating mix of formality, ambiguity and offbeat humor. On the surface a simple fable, it's actually much more.
"Angélica" feels most like the film that argues Oliveira is this close to the beyond without ever bothering to knock first at death's door.
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