Pàtria (2017 film)

Pàtria
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJoan Frank Charansonnet
Written byPau Gener
Joan Frank Charansonnet
Isart Pellín
Based onThe legend of Otger Cataló
Produced byDani Bernabe
Efren Casas
Joan Frank Charansonnet
Alba Lopez
Susanna Plana
Joan Vila
StarringMiquel Sitjar
CinematographyJoan Babiloni
Edited byFernando Casas
Music byRicard Boya
Pedro Burruezo
Production
companies
Dejavú Films
Capaneida Films
Release date
  • 9 June 2017 (2017-06-09)
Running time
112 minutes
CountrySpain
LanguageCatalan
Budget€250,000-€400,000
Box office$56,263

Pàtria (English "Fatherland") is a 2017 Catalan-language Spanish historical drama film directed by Joan Frank Charansonnet, starring Miquel Sitjar. It is based on the legend of the Catalan national hero Otger Cataló as recounted by Pere Tomich. The plot, set in 8th-century Catalonia, follows the story of Otger as he resists the moorish invaders who have occupied Catalonia.

The film was filmed on a very low budget but was awarded Best International Feature Film at the Nice International Film Festival. The film has a strong Catalan nationalist subtext and has been criticised for its negative depiction of the Moors in Spain.

Plot

The film opens in the 15th century, when Climent de Vallcebre, an elderly noble, arrives at the Catalan Monastery of San Llorens. Climent intends to end his days at the monastery, in the company of his friend Abbot Ponç. While at the monastery Climent recounts the deeds of the 8th century warrior Otger Cataló to a young monk named Pere Tomich, who preserves them for posterity in a chronicle he is writing.[1]

The film shows flashbacks to these 8th century events, relating how Otger arrives in Catalonia and begins a bloody war against the saracens.[2] It also tells the story of the origins of the Catalan heroes who fought alongside Otger, the Nine Barons of Fame.[2] Otger and the barons swear to fight for the land against the saracens, led by the Emir Abderraman.

The film contains sequences with a fantasy aspect,[2] including a meeting with a water maiden.[3] It ends tragically, with the death of Otger.[1]

Cast

  • Miquel Sitjar - Otger Cataló
  • Boris Ruiz - Climent de Vallcebre
  • Miquel Gelabert - Abbot Ponç
  • Àngels Bassas - Dolors
  • Joan Massotkleiner - Serafí
  • Joan Frank Charansonnet - Roger Bernat d'Arill
  • Ali El Azis - Abderraman
  • Óscar Aragonés - Corporal
  • Dani Bernabe - Guerau d'Alemany
  • David Canals - Iu
  • Pol Cardona - Gisper de Ribelles
  • Juna Charansonnet - Ermesenda
  • Gala Charanssonet - Oliva
  • Elena Codó - Sicounin
  • Oriol Corriu - Pere Tomich
  • Miquel Folch - Chaplain
  • Neus García - Engràcia
  • Pau Llatjós - Aan
  • Miriam Macias - Carmina
  • Laura Martín - Bruna
  • Albert Padrós - Soldier Guillem
  • Andrea Pajares - Alba
  • Martí Peraferrer - Monk
  • Susanna Plana - Rosella
  • Xavier Prat - Hug de Mataplana
  • Adrià Pujades - Lluc
  • Jordi Reverté - Galceran de Pinòs
  • Albert Riballo - Ahmed
  • Sergi Sáez - Monk

Production and release

The film was produced on a low budget described variously as €250,000,[2] €300,000[4] and €400,000.[5]

The director Joan Frank Charansonnet had long dreamed of making a historical epic which would become a "Catalan Braveheart".[2][3][5] He pitched this idea to the state-funded Catalan-language television channel TV3, but they argued that a film based on Otger was "not of interest".[5] Following this setback, he decided to raise the money for the film by seeking private donations through the crowdfunding website Verkami.[2] The film was shot during April of 2016.[5] During filming, Pàtria benefitted from logistical support from the local councils of various Catalan municipalities, but did not receive any public subsidies.[2] Charansonnet has argued that although this budget restriction had an effect on the film, making it less of an "epic", it simultaneously made the film more realistic, given the small numbers of troops involved early medieval warfare.[2]

The film had Premiers at the International Festival of Cinema in Catalan in Barcelona and at the Nice International Film Festival in May 2015, where it won the award for Best Foreign Language Feature Film.[3][6] The film than debuted across Catalonia on 9 June, 2017.[3]

Reception

Despite the director's stated desire to emulate Braveheart, Eulalia Iglesias, writing in El Confidencial, saw a closer parallel with John Boorman's Excalibur,[2] due to its magical themes and its references to Celtic legend.[2] Iglesias is critical of the way the film introduced the characters of the Nine Barons, each one dedicated a small sequence which she describes as "a compendium of cliches of medieval-toned fiction, with its grubby taverns, witch burnings and grizzled farmers."[2]

The film positions Otger and the Nine Barons as defenders of Catalonia, frequently making use of terms like "invaders",[2][1] "occupiers"[2] and "oppressors"[1] to refer to the Arabs who, according to Otger, "mistreat the land".[1] This focus reflected the contemporary political situation in Catalonia, where the Catalan-nationalist regional government was pushing for independence from Spain.[3][2][1] The clear allusion to contemporary politics was viewed negatively by writers reviewing the film in El Nacional[1] and El Confidencial,[2] but was celebrated in Avui.[3]

Both El Nacional and El Confidencial criticise the film for its depiction of the relationship between Christians and Muslims in medieval Iberia.[1][2] El Confidencial argues that the film's portrayal of the "Saracen" emir is a rehash of old stereotypes of lascivious Arabs kidnapping Christian women.[1] In El Nacional, Gustau Nerín points out that the Christians are presented as the true owners of the land, who are pacifists but nevertheless determined to "liberate every palm of earth from the hands of the outsiders" with "blood and iron".[1] Nerín states that this attitude ignores the reality of medieval convivencia between Christians, Muslims and Jews in Catalonia.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Nerín, Gustau (7 June 2017). "'Pàtria': La película de la independencia de Catalunya". ElNacional.cat. Retrieved 17 May 2025.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Iglesias, Eulalia (9 June 2017). "'Pàtria': el gatillazo del 'Braveheart' catalán". El Confidencial. Retrieved 21 April 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Camps, Jordi. ""«Pàtria» és el primer film èpic sobre els nostres orígens"". El Punt/Avui. Retrieved 17 May 2025.
  4. ^ "Pàtria (2017)". IMDB. Retrieved 23 May 2025.
  5. ^ a b c d Cros, Marc (26 April 2017). "Pàtria: els orígens de Catalunya a la gran pantalla". Retrieved 23 May 2025.
  6. ^ "Nice 2017 Winners". Film Fest International. Retrieved 23 May 2025.