☆ ☆ ☆
Marshland (2014) – A. Rodríguez
Spanish take on the serial killer genre with two cops,
one young and idealistic and one older and cynical, hunting a killer of young
girls in the rural south of the country. The time is 1980 and Franco has been
dead for five years but his loyalists remain in this area. The younger cop has
been relocated from Madrid for writing an outspoken pro-democracy letter to the
newspaper. The older cop is rumored to have been part of Franco’s secret
police. Together they must track down the killer of two teen sisters who may have
been the subject of pornographic photographs. So, the content is dark and the
film moves slowly, taking its time to linger on the landscape (wasteland or
marshland). The clues add up, as do the victims (some from the past). Those in positions of power may be
implicated. As the plot takes several twists
and turns, we learn more about the two detectives and perhaps they come to
understand or accept each other. But by the time we get to the end of the
picture, a few plot holes still exist (or perhaps I missed some important
details or did not quite grasp the cultural context). And, not unlike some
classics of the neo-noir genre (e.g., Chinatown), even as the mystery appears solved,
justice remains somewhere in the distance.
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