• Goyas® Awards

    Best First Feature Nominee
  • Ferroz® Awards

    Best Comedy Nominee
  • Atlántida Film Fest

    Honorary Mention
  • SANFIC - Santiago Int'l Film Festival

    Special Mention in Best Direction
  • Cork Int'l Film Festival

    Jury Special Mention
  • San Sebastian Int'l Film Festival

  • Karlovy Vary Int'l Film Festival

  • Sao Paulo Int'l Film Festival

Spanish Film Club
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Spanish with English subtitles

With Bárbara Lennie, Irene Escolar, Itziar Manero, Helena Ezquerro, Itsaso Arana

Why will your students love The Girls Are Alright? Bringing together five of Spain’s finest actresses, the film evokes the spirit of Rohmer with its delicate exploration of art, friendship, and creative collaboration to challenge, among other things, the role of women in traditional tales within a delightful summer countryside setting.

Nominated for Best New Director at the recent edition of the Goya Awards, multi-hyphened director Itsaso Arana joins Bárbara Lennie, Irene Escolar, Itziar Manero, and Helena Ezquerro in a summer tale about the coexistence of four actresses and their writer who seclude themselves from the world to rehearse a play in an old mill. This is in the story of a spell.

With princesses, toads, rivers, letters, and even a confused prince. During a few days of rehearsal, the actresses will get to know and measure each other through the materials presented in the play they are preparing, and they will contribute their own experiences around their characters’ themes: love, beauty, orphanhood, faith, friendship, acting, and death.

Press

“A charming portrait of five women retreating to a rural village to rehearse a play, learning more than their lines in the process. A gentle study of female friendship.” – Guy Lodge, Variety

“Everything flows effortlessly here, and if this debut film has anything, it is truth, transparency, humility, and a certain charm.” – Laura Pérez, Fotogramas

“A prodigy of clairvoyant, lucid, weightless cinema. One of the most charming and beautiful surprises of the season.” – Luis Martínez, El Mundo

“A beautiful and touching picture about film as a mirror of our lives and a way to remember them. ” – Júlia Olmo, Cineuropa

About the Director
Itsaso Arana has built an extensive career as an actress and creator.

She has starred in Jonás Trueba’s feature films You Have To Come And See It (2022), winner of the Special Jury Prize at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival; The August Virgin (2019), which received a Special Jury Mention and the FIPRESCI Award at Karlovy Vary and was named one of the Top 10 Films of 2020 by Cahiers du Cinéma; and The Reconquest (2016), part of the Official Selection at the San Sebastian Film Festival.

She has also appeared in films such as Las Altas Presiones (2014) by Ángel Santos, Daniel Sánchez Arévalo’s Seventeen (2019), and The Volunteer (2022) by Nely Reguera, as well as in series like Reyes de la noche and The Girls at the Back.

In 2004, Itsaso co-founded the scenic arts group La Tristura, where she creates, directs, and performs in her productions. These plays have been staged in theaters and at prestigious festivals across Spain, France, Germany, Finland, Poland, Brazil, and more.

The Girls Are Alright, for which she wrote the screenplay and co-stars, marks her directorial debut.

Notes on Film

“I was born into a family of women. I have always been drawn to stories about groups of women living together—despairing, admiring, envying one another; braiding each other’s hair. From The Heroides to The House of Bernarda Alba, from Sleeping Beauty to Victorian Tales, women wait, wish, dream, and imagine. They grow impatient, write letters, or pull each other’s hair in a kind of sisterhood that is both nurturing and imposed.

A few years ago, I experienced my own kind of confinement with five women. We spent days and nights together, gathered around a bed, waiting for the inevitable: my father’s passing. That waiting felt eerily familiar, like stepping into the stories that had always captivated me—a prophecy of sorts. The Girls Are Alright was born from those days, from that image.

This project is also a meeting point for the two passions that have shaped my life: theater and cinema. It is driven by the hope that something alive and unique can emerge from their interplay, combining cinema’s ability to capture life with theater’s rituality and evocative power.

At its core, The Girls Are Alright is a story about the creative process, collaboration, doubts, and contradictions of a group of actresses and how they are transformed by the materials of the play they rehearse.

It is both a period film and a contemporary one. Without abandoning literary stylization, it remains fresh and grounded, portraying the lives of five young women coexisting in a country house. It explores their fears and triumphs, their personal and romantic struggles, their small rivalries, and their bonds of solidarity.

The Girls Are Alright is a work of fiction with an essayistic spirit, fluid and free in its approach to genre. Its characters are multifaceted: fragile, brave, clumsy, funny, and utterly human.”

– Itsaso Arana, Director