In Basque with English subtitles
With Iraia Elías, Kandido Uranga, Amparo Badiola, Ander Lipus, Klara Badiola, Manu Uranga, Nagore Aranburu
Along with this year’s Oscar submission LOREAK, this powerfully visualized drama of generational conflict signals the emergence of a vital Basque regional cinema in Spain. The crux of the film is a farm, spectacularly situated in the mountainous northeast, that has remained in the same family for countless generations. But, when the eldest son and heir apparent, like so many of the region’s young people, decamps to the city, the burden passes to his sister Amaia (Elias), an artist whose progressive ways place her at odds with her rigidly traditionalist father (Aranga). The film’s title, which means “Grandma” in Basque, refers to the family matriarch who will play a pivotal role in Amaia’s attempt to bridge the divide between tradition and evolution.
Gene Siskel Film Center
Press
“If you want to be thoughtfully melancholy for a couple of hours in the presence of images of striking beauty, watch Amama.” – Jonathan Holland, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
“An intense generation gap drama set in a remote area of northern Spain's Basque Country, Asier Altuna’s visually sumptuous second feature about a family's struggle to break loose from its past is sometimes ponderous but more often poetic, rolling with a slow cumulative power which means that by the end, most early doubts about hollow pretentiousness have been dispelled.” – Jonathan Holland, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
About the Director
Asier Altuna (Bergara, 1969) had already made his mark in short films, some of which landed awards at different events: Topeka (2004), Sarean (2006) and the ones co-directed with Telmo Esnal, Txotx (1997) and 40 ezetz (1999). His feature debut was the comedy, Aupa Etxebeste! (2005), also co-directed with Telmo Esnal, which competed in the Zabaltegi-New Directors section of San Sebastian Festival, winning the Youth Award.