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A dramatic story about the missing history, where Rebecca and Mark, a troubled couple, decided to go into a new experience to look for memories of the past and decided to conclude a deal to resolve their differences again. Rebecca and Mark travel to the home of the grandparents of Rebecca in the Basque Country to write the story about their parents and return to everything hidden in the history of their fathers in the story of the move of history 25 years ago.
The Tree Of Blood is 138 minutes long, but doesn't drag. As involved as you'll get in the story, though, it takes a bit of mental energy to put all the pieces together.
Medem closes a tentative stage, in search of a reformulation of himself that he did not find, to propose the bold declaration of principles of those who are willing to go beyond the excess of Caótica Ana. [Full Review in Spanish]
The footage is in fact full of leitmotifs, already present in [director Julio] Medem's previous films... but here they are not so well linked to the main plot. [Full review in Spanish]
"The Tree of Blood" is always lovely to look at, but, at times, it's like wandering into somebody else's family reunion, where strangers are arguing intensely about people you've never met.