Crimen Ferpecto

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Crimen Ferpecto
Directed byÁlex de la Iglesia
Screenplay by
Produced byRoberto di Girolamo
Gustavo Ferrada
Álex de la Iglesia
Starring
CinematographyJosé L. Moreno
Edited byAlejandro Lázaro
Music by
Sogecine
  • Planet Pictures
  • Distributed byWarner Sogefilms (Spain)
    Release date
    • 22 October 2004 (2004-10-22) (Spain)
    Running time
    106 minutes
    Countries
    • Spain
    • Italy
    LanguageSpanish

    Crimen Ferpecto, released as The Perfect Crime in the United States,

    Guillermo Toledo
    and Mónica Cervera.

    Plot

    Rafael is a women's clothing clerk at a large Madrid department store, Yeyo's. His department is filled with beautiful, comely young women whom Rafael routinely seduces. When Rafael vies for a management position with Don Antonio, a men's clothing clerk whom Rafael despises, a fluke causes Don Antonio to win the promotion. He fires Rafael and a fight ensues in which Rafael accidentally kills Don Antonio. Lourdes, an ugly and unassuming clerk at the store, witnesses the outcome of the fight, helps Rafael incinerate the body, and provides an alibi for the police. Rafael wins his coveted promotion, but at a terrible cost: Lourdes blackmails Rafael into an unwanted relationship. He is forced to fire his many former lovers, to marry Lourdes (she proposes on a live reality TV show) and to support clown-like women's clothing of her design. Rafael becomes so depressed he begins to hallucinate, seeing the ghost of Don Antonio who suggests Rafael should kill Lourdes. As the police are also pressing him again, he causes a fire in the department store and fakes his death, in front of his wife and a police officer. Five years later, he (with a false identity) has a small business selling ties and socks, but Lourdes' clown-like clothes are a success and she becomes a millionaire, the film ending with Rafael gobsmacked at a clown fashion parade and Lourdes catwalk, panning out to a huge digital billboard reading "Our Love Is Forever".

    Cast

    Production

    A Spain-Italy international co-production, the film was produced by Pánico Films and Sogecine alongside Planet Pictures,

    EiTB.[3]

    Release

    Distributed by Warner Sogefilms,[5][6] the film was theatrically released in Spain on 22 October 2004.[3]

    The film had a limited US release in theatres of New York and Los Angeles in August 2005.[7]

    Reception

    The film received very positive reviews from critics, 85% of critics gave the film a positive review based on 53 reviews and an average score of 7.1/10 according to Rotten Tomatoes.

    Accolades

    Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
    2005 19th Goya Awards Best Actor Guillermo Toledo Nominated [8]
    Best Supporting Actor Luis Varela Nominated
    Best New Actress Mónica Cervera Nominated
    Production Supervision Juanma Pagazaurtundua Nominated
    Best Sound Charla Schmukler, Jaime Fernández, Sergio Burmann Nominated
    Best Special Effects Félix Bergés, Juan Ramón Molina Nominated

    See also

    References

    Citations
    1. ^ Gonzalez, Ed (July 30, 2005). "Review: The Perfect Crime". Slant Magazine. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
    2. ^ Churchill, Chris (January 10, 2008). "Álex de la Iglesia's CRIMEN FERPECTO aka THE FERPECT CRIME Receives DVD Release In The UK". Screen Anarchy. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
    3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Buse, Triana Toribio & Willis 2007, p. 186.
    4. ^ Silió, Elisa (24 February 2005). "'Crimen ferpecto', de Álex de la Iglesia, se estrenará en EE UU". El País.
    5. Lumiere
      . Retrieved 13 November 2021.
    6. ^ Sánchez Noriega, José Luis (2006). "La cultura cinematográfica en la prensa escrita. Un estudio de la información, crítica y publicidad de estrenos en el diario El País". Ámbitos (15): 229.
    7. ^ Widginton, Jason (20 March 2007). "The Perfect Crime (El Crimen Perfecto) (2004) | DVD Review". Ion Cinema.
    8. ^ "Crimen Ferpecto". premiosgoya.com. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
    Bibliography
    • Buse, Peter; Triana Toribio, Núria; Willis, Andy (2007). The cinema of Álex de la Iglesia. Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press.

    External links