Neon Flesh

Neon Flesh (Spanish: Carne de neón) is a 2010 neo-noir thriller with comedy elements film directed by Paco Cabezas which stars Mario Casas alongside Vicente Romero, Macarena Gómez, Blanca Suárez, and Ángela Molina. It is a Spanish-Argentine-Swedish-French co-production.

Neon Flesh
Theatrical release poster
SpanishCarne de neón
Directed byPaco Cabezas
Screenplay byPaco Cabezas
Based onCarne de neón (short film)
by Paco Cabezas
Produced byJuan Gordon
Starring
CinematographyDaniel Aranyó
Edited byAntonio Frutos
Music by
  • Julio de la Rosa
  • Óscar Araujo
Production
companies
  • Morena Films
  • Jaleo Films
  • Oberon Cinematográfica
  • Mandarin Films
  • Hepp Films
  • Pensa&Rocca
Distributed byVértice Cine (es)
Release dates
  • 9 October 2010 (2010-10-09) (Sitges)
  • 21 January 2011 (2011-01-21) (Spain)
  • 21 February 2013 (2013-02-21) (Argentina)
Countries
  • Spain
  • Argentina
  • Sweden
  • France
LanguageSpanish

Plot

Ricky's mama just got out of jail. He has spent years relating to people of all kinds due to his life on the street and that makes him have in mind the project of setting up a hostess club so that his mother is the boss and thus stop practicing prostitution directly, the "Hiroshima Club ".

But things are not easy and he will have to face multiple obstacles until he can achieve it. He will have the help of a pimp, a thug and a transvestite to achieve it.

Cast

Production

The film is based on a short film of the same name directed by Paco Cabezas.[5] Some cast members from the short film reprised their roles in the full-length film (notable exceptions were Óscar Jaenada and Victoria Abril, respectively replaced by Mario Casas and Ángela Molina).[6]

A co-production among companies from Spain, Argentina, Sweden and France, the film was produced by Juan Gordon's Morena Films alongside Jaleo Films, Oberon Cinematográfica, Mandarin Films, Hepp Films and Pensa&Rocca,[7] with the participation of Canal Sur, TVC, TVV, TVG, and ETB.[2] Shooting locations in Spain included Seville[6] whereas shooting locations in Argentina included Belgrano (Buenos Aires).[8] Crew during the Argentine part of the filming used masks due to the 2009 swine flu pandemic alert.[1]

Release

The film was presented at the Sitges Film Festival on 9 October 2010.[5]

Distributed by Vértice Cine, it was theatrically released in Spain on 21 January 2011.[9] It opened in Argentine theatres on 21 February 2013.[10]

Reception

Jonathan Holland of Variety assessed that the "hugely entertaining" film "reps crude, violent, flashy and sentimental fare, but with a sharp, intelligent edge that gets it out of jail".[2]

Jesús Palacios of Fotogramas rated the film 3 out of 5 stars highlighting the honesty of the proposal whilst pointing out its "cinephagic naivety", assessing that "however irregular it sometimes appears, [it is] one of the most refreshing Spanish films of the year".[4]

See also

References

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