The Hidden Face (film)

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The Hidden Face
United States theatrical release poster
SpanishLa cara oculta
Directed byAndrés Baiz
Written by
  • Andrés Baiz
  • Arturo Infante
  • Hatem Khraiche
Produced by
  • Andrés Calderón
  • Cristian Conti
Starring
CinematographyJosep Civit
Edited byRoberto Otero
Music byFederico Jusid
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox (Spain)
Buena Vista International[1] (Colombia; through Cinecolor Films[2])
Release dates
  • 16 September 2011 (2011-09-16) (Spain)
  • 20 January 2012 (2012-01-20) (Colombia)
Running time
97 minutes
Countries
  • Spain
  • Colombia
LanguageSpanish
Budget$2.6 million
Box office$5.2 million[1]

The Hidden Face (Spanish: La cara oculta) is a 2011 thriller film directed by Andrés Baiz, who has also co-written the screenplay.[3] The film is a Spanish-Colombian co-production. It stars Quim Gutiérrez, Clara Lago and Martina García.

Plot[edit]

Adrián, a young orchestra conductor is viewing a recorded video of his girlfriend Belén informing him of leaving him. Adrián becomes distraught. While drinking away his sorrows at a bar, he meets Fabiana (Martina Garcia) and they develop a relationship. Fabiana moves into the house that Adrián was sharing with Belén. Strange things begin to occur in the bathroom, with Fabiana observing strange noises coming from the sink and bathtub, and being scalded by an abruptly hot shower.

Adrián becomes a suspect in the disappearance of Belén; however, the investigators can find no evidence of Adrián's involvement in Belén's disappearance. One of the police investigators, apparently a former boyfriend of Fabiana, warns Adrián that if anything happens to Fabiana he will kill Adrián.

The house belongs to Emma, a German woman, who reveals a soundproof secret room intended for her former Nazi officer husband. Belén, driven by jealousy over Adrián's connection with violinist Verónica, follows Emma's suggestion to pretend she's leaving him. She records a breakup video and hides in the secret room, equipped with two-way mirrors to spy on Adrián's reaction. Belén plans to end the ruse, but loses the key, trapping herself without a way to contact Adrián.

Fabiana finds the key to the secret room, but she does not know what it is used for. Fabiana eventually figures out that Belén is trapped in the house because Belén is able to communicate through tapping on the pipes in the secret room, creating ripples in the full bathroom sink. As Fabiana is ready to open the door, she pauses and decides not to rescue Belén because she might lose Adrián.

Despite her inner turmoil, Fabiana opens the secret room's door to check on the unresponsive Belén. Jealousy stoked by an investigator's pictures of Adrián and Verónica influences Fabiana's decision. Inside the room, she finds Belén lying on a bed. Unexpectedly, Belén knocks Fabiana out, rendering her unconscious, and locks her in. Belén leaves the house, placing the secret room's key on a bed for Adrián and attaching a photo of them to the mirrored door. The film ends with Belén alone on the beach, and Fabiana trapped, awaiting rescue.

Cast[edit]

Reception[edit]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 80% based on 5 reviews.[4] Jonathan Holland from Variety wrote: "Andi Baiz's ambitious follow-up to the well-received Satanás does decent crowd-pleasing work, supplying the requisite jolts and nervous giggles en route to a payoff that's much stronger than its wobbly setup. But the pic ultimately fails to marshal its effects into anything more than throwaway entertainment."[5] Chris Hewitt from St. Paul Pioneer Press gave a positive review, he wrote: "I'm not sure La Cara Oculta can stand up to much scrutiny — there's at least one gaping plot hole — but it's plenty of fun while its 93 minutes are zipping by."[6] Jordi Batlle Caminal from Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia described the film as "(according to its own director) a tribute to Hitchcock's Rebecca, Suspicion and Notorious... The Hidden Face reveals itself as a suspense film well filmed and effective, willing to style and smoothly: tension is uniform and never decays."[7]

Remakes[edit]

The film was remade in different countries: in India, titled Murder 3 (2013); Turkey, titled Öteki Taraf (2017); and Mexico, titled Perdida (2019).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Cara Oculta, La". Box Office Mojo.
  2. ^ "Cine colombiano: LA CARA OCULTA". Proimágenes Colombia. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  3. ^ Alonso, Patricia (16 September 2011). "Cuando el amor se convierte en posesión". abcplay. ABC.
  4. ^ "La Cara Oculta (2012)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  5. ^ Jonathan Holland (3 October 2011). "Review: 'Bunker'". Variety.
  6. ^ Chris Hewitt. ""La Cara Oculta" review: Colombian mystery eventually gets a clue". St. Paul Pioneer Press.
  7. ^ Jordi Batlle Caminal. "'La cara oculta': Suspense bien filmado". La Vanguardia (in Spanish).

External links[edit]