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Lovers Of The Arctic Circle on DVD (1998)

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Average rating: 72%
11244131620714
3.5
from 757 members
 
Starring: Fele Martinez, Najwa Nimri
Director: Julio Medem
Studio: STUDIO CANAL PLUS OPTIMUM
Run time: 104 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: Some World Cinema Gems, good news for people who like bad news, Films that don't insult your intelligence, My Faves, why I love cinema
Genres: Drama, World Cinema
Languages: Spanish
Subtitles: English
Released: 24/07/2000

Brief synopsis of Lovers Of The Arctic Circle

Two children meet by chance and form a bond which carries them through all sorts of trials and coincidences. Only after becoming teens and step-siblings, do they profess their love for each other, embarking on an erotic odyssey that will take them to the ends of the Earth.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Though not as well-known outside Spain as Pedro Almodóvar, the work of Basque director Julio Medem is just as iconoclastic, compelling and unique. Medem gained a slew of fans with Vacas, Tierra and The Red Squirrel, but his latest metaphysical romance is his most inventive and accessible work to date. From the age of eight, Otto (Fele Martínez) and Ana (Najwa Nimri) know they are destined to be together. However, fate keeps intervening well into adulthood, forcing their on again/off again relationship to weather their being apart for long stretches. Will they ever be reunited? The answer to that question lies in a shattering climax that underlines the capriciousness of kismet and how we are all powerless in directing our lives. Employing an unusual narrative technique that blurs both lovers' perspectives together, and a dazzling style that confuses time periods and repeats certain key scenes, this dreamy rumination on unrequited love, chance and coincidence is a wonderfully rich and potent fable for our times.

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

An unusual, lyrical movie about predestination, and the way one life links unexpectedly with another; it is also a charmingly romantic tale of loves lost and won.

Time Out

Otto is just eight years old when he falls in love with Ana. The first time she lays eyes on him, she sees her dead... Read more on www.timeout.com

See all 4 Critics Reviews »

Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsMore inspired than Sex and Lucia

RichD from W Sussex , 19/01/2004

I can recommend this film. The early scenes of how the lovers meet as eight years olds are most beautifully shot and, I found, stunning in the clarity with which they present the complex personalities of the young kids. No patronising view of what makes a child tick from Julio Medem - it’s full on. Appreciate the seemingly effortless way he presents the physiological dependencies of the young pair.

Beautiful but sometimes painful childhood leads into a sensual but even more painful adolescence. The lovers show decisiveness to bring their destinies together but the destructive forces of broken family betrayal and death combine to shake it all apart before the transition to adulthood.

Thus we are left with the crux of the matter, will they find the chance on the winds of fate to be together - for ever?

It’s not without sentimentality, but I forgive Medem that. Who knows how close we have been to fulfilling the biggest desires of our lives, but just failed to seize the chance that we sensed was close but invisible? Medem is toying with the "what if?" as if to say who really knows? You never really know. Equally, the overly symmetrical coincidences in the family stories that lead the lovers together did not trouble me. It served just to emphasise that sometimes we live in other dimensions that to us are more important than reality. This is the dimension that Julio Medem accesses with ease.

  11 out of 13 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsLeft me cold

Bill Hardwick from Cheshire , 20/09/2005

I was totally unable to relate to this film at any level. Not helped by often illegible subtitles, it seemed a vacuous exercise. It is the only film I've rented so far that I failed to watch to the end - plain bored.

  8 out of 12 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsQuirky

Andrew from Scotland , 07/05/2004

A little too quriky for it's own good, and a lack of chemistry from the leads leaves this a little disappointing. It can be seen what the film was trying to achieve - it just fell short.

  6 out of 8 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsThe intention is good but...

DMuller from Roehampton , 09/05/2005

This film is about two lovers who know each other from childhood and their fight against destiny to be together. The approach is somewhat original in that the story is told from the point of view of the boy and the girl alternately. The rhythm is slow but not oppressively slow and the overall tone is slightly magical. Not a bad film but it?s spoiled by a contrived script which sometimes makes the two main characters choose the options directly opposed to their feelings, just for the sake of enhancing the fatalistic quality of the story.

See ?The Red Squirrel?, by the same director. The script is more fluid (though not more natural), the performances are better and the film is more enigmatic and interesting.

By the way, some people believe that this film is set in the Spanish speaking community in Finland. Actually, most of the action happens in Spain and only a few scenes are set in Finland. I suppose that the confusion arises from a scene where the two lovers are riding a sledge in the snow. That scene happens in Spain, country where it snows every winter.

  4 out of 4 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsMore inspired than Sex and Lucia

RichD from W Sussex , 19/01/2004

I can recommend this film. The early scenes of how the lovers meet as eight years olds are most beautifully shot and, I found, stunning in the clarity with which they present the complex personalities of the young kids. No patronising view of what makes a child tick from Julio Medem - it’s full on. Appreciate the seemingly effortless way he presents the physiological dependencies of the young pair.

Beautiful but sometimes painful childhood leads into a sensual but even more painful adolescence. The lovers show decisiveness to bring their destinies together but the destructive forces of broken family betrayal and death combine to shake it all apart before the transition to adulthood.

Thus we are left with the crux of the matter, will they find the chance on the winds of fate to be together - for ever?

It’s not without sentimentality, but I forgive Medem that. Who knows how close we have been to fulfilling the biggest desires of our lives, but just failed to seize the chance that we sensed was close but invisible? Medem is toying with the "what if?" as if to say who really knows? You never really know. Equally, the overly symmetrical coincidences in the family stories that lead the lovers together did not trouble me. It served just to emphasise that sometimes we live in other dimensions that to us are more important than reality. This is the dimension that Julio Medem accesses with ease.

  11 out of 13 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsA typically fractured contrivance from Sr Medem

Savage from London, England [Highly rated reviewer] , 01/05/2007

Julio Medem, who wrote and directed this film, studied psychiatry at medical school before dropping out to become a film critic and, eventually, a director. All of his films bear the hallmark of his education, but none of them are quite as profound as he seems to like to think.

Here he takes a boy and a girl, throws them randomly together, has them fall in love, and then shatters their relationship (and their lives, and the lives of their immediate families - except those who get as far away as possible, to Australia) before teasing his audience that there might still be a chance for a reconciliation. The key scene appears to be the one in the gift shop, played out in front of a baffled sales assistant, unsure whether she's watching young love or your actual incest. Once the balance, particularly in Otto's mind, is broken by his mother's sudden death, nothing can be the same again: flirting with fate brings its own revenge.

The film is either compelling and charming in its reflections on the whimsicality of fate and love, or thoroughly irritating in its switchback ride. I lean towards the former, but I'm not entirely convinced.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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