The Beasts (2023)

Direction: Rodrigo Sorogoyen
Country: Spain 

This oppressive and often disturbing rural thriller set in the mountains of Galicia is cold as ice, and comes packed with a nerve-wracking tension that will take your breath away. The Beasts is a powerful work of nightmarish force by Rodrigo Sorogoyen (The Candidate, 2018), who, inspired by the uncomfortable atmosphere of Carlos Saura’s movies (The Hunt, 1966; Cria Cuervos, 1976), excels by reaching mastery dimensions in the direction, storytelling, editing, and staging. 

A French couple, Antoine (Denis Ménochet) and Olga (Marina Foïs), has been living their dream as ecological farmers in a small village in Galicia for a few years. They also have another business on the side, restoring abandoned houses to facilitate repopulation. However, rough peasant neighbors - brothers Xan (Luis Zahera) and Lorenzo (Diego Anido) - who have their own reasons for being frustrated with life, resolve minor conflicts with provocation and confrontation, both physical and verbal.

These characters are very easy to decipher but hard to digest. There’s a major shift of focus in the story line that caught me by surprise and whose resolution left me speechless. This is a rigorous, terrifying and implacable portrait of neighborhood harassment; and its topics - eco farms, renewable energy opportunities, resentment, xenophobia - are very current.

Benefitting from incredibly sincere performances from the four leads, Sorogoyen doles out a dark, shattering piece of filmmaking that is as brutal as it is essential.