The Heart of the Earth

The Heart of the Earth (Spanish: El corazón de la tierra) is a 2007 historical drama film directed by Antonio Cuadri [es] from a screenplay he wrote with Shelley Miller, and Doc Comparato, based on the novel of the same name by Juan Cobos Wilkins [es]. It is a Spanish-British-Portuguese co-production. Its cast features Catalina Sandino Moreno, Sienna Guillory, Philip Winchester, Bernard Hill, Joaquim de Almeida, Jorge Perugorría, and Ana Fernández, among others.

The Heart of the Earth
Spanish theatrical release poster
SpanishEl corazón de la tierra
Directed byAntonio Cuadri
Screenplay by
Based onEl corazón de la tierra
by Juan Cobos Wilkins
Starring
CinematographyJavier Salmones
Edited byMercedes Cantero
Music byFernando Ortí Salvador
Production
companies
  • Manufacturas Audiovisuales
  • Future Films
  • Costa do Castelo
Distributed byZeta Audiovisual
Release dates
  • March 2007 (2007-03) (Miami)
  • 13 April 2007 (2007-04-13) (Spain)
Countries
  • Spain
  • United Kingdom
  • Portugal
LanguageSpanish

Plot

The plot is set against the backdrop of the February 1888 miners' protest in the Spanish province of Huelva stirred by Cuban anarchist revolutionary Maximiliano Tornet [es], which was bloodily repressed by the Spanish Army, and the miners' deplorable working conditions in the Río Tinto copper mines under British employees, following the plight of Blanca (a teacher) and her friend Kathleen Crown, the daughter of the tyrannical manager of the mines, fifteen years after the events.[1][2][3]

Cast

Release

The film premiered at the Miami Film Festival in March 2007.[5] It received a pre-screening in Riotinto and Seville on 10 April 2007.[5] Distributed by Zeta Audiovisual, it was released theatrically in Spain on 13 April 2007.[6]

Production

The Heart of the Earth is a Spanish-British-Portuguese co-production by Manufacturas Audiovisuales, Future Films, and Costa do Castelo, with the participation of Canal Sur, TV3, ETB, IC, IB3, TeleMadrid, Canal 9, and Canal+.[1] It boasted a 12.5 million budget.[7] Shooting locations included Linares de la Sierra, Minas de Riotinto, Trigueros, Portimão, and Madrid.[7]

Reception

Jonathan Holland of Variety wrote that despite the "superb" concept involving the tragic, real-life 19th-century suppression of the miners rebellion, "the script rushes through the historical facts in the first half-hour and then becomes far-fetched in its invented stretches".[1]

Javier Ocaña of El País assessed that despite Cuadri's "excellent camera handling" at shooting mining excavations and riots, as the film progresses, "the story becomes less and less transcendent, more and more Manichean and puerile".[8]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
200711th Los Angeles Latino International Film FestivalBest FilmWon[9]
200822nd Goya AwardsBest Special EffectsReyes Abades, Álex G. OrtollNominated[10]
Best Makeup and HairstylesJosé Quetglás, Blanca SánchezNominated

See also

References