Mondays in the Sun (2002) - Turner Classic Movies

Mondays in the Sun


1h 53m 2002

Brief Synopsis

In a northern coastal city of Spain, which turned its back on the countryside long ago and surrounded itself with industries, a group of men make their way through the streets everyday, looking for life's emergency exits. Walking the tightrope of precarious employment, taking shelter in their daily

Film Details

Also Known As
Los Lunes al Sol, Lunes al Sol, Måndagar i solen
MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
2002
Distribution Company
Lionsgate
Location
Spain

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 53m

Synopsis

In a northern coastal city of Spain, which turned its back on the countryside long ago and surrounded itself with industries, a group of men make their way through the streets everyday, looking for life's emergency exits. Walking the tightrope of precarious employment, taking shelter in their daily conversations and routine--as if the dismal wreck of their lives was not their own. While they talk of their exploits and laugh, at everything and nothing in particular, they try to remain full of hope, relaxed, on a Monday morning in the sun.

Crew

Jordi Abusada

Camera Operator

Maria Jose Almela

Editorial Assistant

Primitivo Alvaro

Project Director

Beatriz Arribe

Production Assistant

Jose Angel Cabanas

Assistant Director

Olga Carretero

Photography

Carmen Casal

Wardrobe Assistant

Jose Luis Crespo

Score Recording

Carmen De Miguel

Coordinator

Ignacio Del Moral

Other

Javier Ercilla

Production Assistant

Iveco-pegaso Espana

Transportation

Julio Esteban

Art Director

Virgilio Esteban

Production

Alejandra Fernandez

Assistant Director

Daniel Fernandez

Assistant Camera

Jose A Fernandez Delgado

Chief Lighting Technician

Eva L Fontenla

Makeup Assistant

Jose Luis Gago

Production Assistant

Hector Garcia

Score Recording

Patrick Ghislain

Score Recording

Patrick Ghislain

Music Scoring Mixer

Elena Gil-nagel

Script Supervisor

Lucio Godoy

Music

Ricardo Gomez

Visual Effects Supervisor

Marivi Hebrero

Production Coordinator

Carlos Hernandez

Hair Stylist

Carlos Hernandez

Makeup

Jose Herrero

Construction

Afer Hosteleros

Caterer

Fernando León De Aranoa

Screenplay

Ricardo Llovo

Video

Pierre Lorrain

Sound

Maiki Marin

Costume Designer

Vicente Martin

Photography

Carolina Martinez

Editorial Assistant

David Melero

Electrician

Antonio Ordonez

Assistant Director

Jose M Penafiel

Accountant

Octavio Perez

Assistant Director

Xose Anton Perozo

Set Production Assistant

Pablo Pimentel

Score Recording

Elias Querejeta

Producer

Jose Manuel Quiroga

Assistant Director

Mireille Ranaivo

Production Assistant

Alfonso Raposo

Sound Mixer

Jaume Roures

Coproducer

Graciela Rubio

Tailor

Nacho Ruiz Capillas

Editor

Luis San Narciso

Casting

Ma Jesus Sanchez

Negative Cutting

Jorge Santalla

Assistant

Antonio Fernandez Santanmaria

Grip

Alberto Tome

Production Assistant

Pierre Tucat

Audio

Maria L Vieitez

Production Assistant

Clarisa Vigo

Extras Agent/Coordinator

Santiago Zuazo

Assistant Camera

Film Details

Also Known As
Los Lunes al Sol, Lunes al Sol, Måndagar i solen
MPAA Rating
Genre
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
2002
Distribution Company
Lionsgate
Location
Spain

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 53m

Articles

Mondays in the Sun - MONDAYS IN THE SUN (Los Lunes Al Sol) - Fernando Leon's Critically Acclaimed 2002 Spanish Drama on DVD


Mondays in the Sun, known as Los Lunes al sol in its native Spanish, begins with documentary footage of a blistering labor demonstration, shot by director Fernando León de Aranoa a few years before he embarked on the 2002 feature itself. After this the story begins; first the camera settles on a crowd of people waiting to board a ferry, and then it narrows its focus to a small group of friends who emerge as the film's main characters. The implication is that any of the folks in line for the boat ride, or any of the protesters we saw earlier, could command our attention just as easily. This democratic approach, based on the proposition that ordinary lives take on extraordinary interest if we observe them with sympathy and care, explains the movie's tagline: "This film is not based on a real story. It is based on thousands."

The plot centers on several men whose lives have been disrupted by layoffs at the shipyard where they used to work. Saddled with endless free time that's become a heavy psychological burden, they while away the hours at a bar owned by Rico, who bought the place with money he got as a settlement when he lost his job. The unofficial leader of the pack is Santa Santamaria, a former welder whose nickname is too lighthearted for his scrappy, often angry personality. His friend Lino is anxious to find a new job, but after countless rejections at the unemployment office he concludes that no one will hire him because of his middle-aged looks. Reina has become a security guard at a soccer stadium, which turns out not to be much fun. José has a steadily employed wife, but her stand-up job in a fish-packing plant is destroying her legs and causing household tension. Amador downs far too much booze while pining for his wife to return from her extended visit to a relative. Rounding out this not-so-merry crew is Sergei, a Russian full of hard-to-believe stories about training as a cosmonaut before the Soviet Union went out of business. Also in the picture is Rico's teenage daughter, Nata, who flirts harmlessly with Santa and serves as a mostly silent witness to the jokes, quarrels, and sob stories that echo through the bar with hardly any changes from one day to the next.

Mondays in the Sun builds a remarkable sense of human drama around these commonplace guys, even though so little happens to them that their story is scarcely a story at all. Lino dyes his hair so he'll look a little younger, then sweats so much with worry that the coloring runs down his neck. José and Ana, his long-suffering spouse, apply for a loan but instantly strike out when José erupts with rage at a system he thinks is automatically stacked against him. Reina sneaks his friends into the bleachers to watch a game at the stadium, but the view is so bad that they can't tell who scored. Amador drinks and drinks, Sergei talks and talks, and Santa seethes with discontent while earning pocket change as a babysitter, bantering with a woman he meets at a supermarket, and struggling with a big decision: Should he pay a court-ordered fine for destroying a streetlight during a union protest, or stand on his principles and go to jail instead? His marvelously off-kilter solution to this dilemma is one of the picture's high points, as is a scene where Santa reads the story of "The Grasshopper and the Ant" to a little boy he's babysitting, grows increasingly agitated about the treatment of the underemployed grasshopper, and unloads a sociopolitical tirade on the poor kid, who has no idea what's going on.

With its minimalist plot, down-to-earth characters, and sensitive eye for detail, Mondays in the Sun resembles films of the Italian neorealist movement that flourished in the post-World War II years – Vittorio De Sica's moving Umberto D. and The Bicycle Thief, for instance, which also depict men cast adrift in an uncaring city. But while those movies use nonprofessional actors in the leading roles, Mondays in the Sun has an experienced cast, headed by Javier Bardem, whose moody portrayal of the temperamental Santa is the picture's rock-solid center of gravity. Luis Tosar and Celso Bugallo are equally strong as the gloomy José and the alcoholic Amador, and young Aida Folch is exactly right as Nata, the adolescent barmaid. There isn't a weak performance in the picture, right down to Laura Domínguez as the supermarket "cheese girl" whose low-key flirting provides one of the few bright spots in the largely empty life that Santa now finds himself living.

The secret to making an engrossing film out of an understated story is to generate human drama without slipping into melodrama, and Aranoa rarely loses his footing. (His use of Lucio Godoy's music seems a bit cloying to me, but in the DVD commentary he praises it for giving the sweet-and-sad atmosphere he wanted.) Smart and perceptive in almost every scene, the picture fully deserves the five awards and three nominations it earned in the Goya Awards competition (Spain's equivalent of the Oscars) for the best achievements of 2002. The winners were Aranoa as best director; Bardem as best actor; Tosar as best supporting actor; José Ángel Egido, who plays Lino, as best new actor; and best picture for the movie itself.

Mondays in the Sun looks and sounds terrific on the DVD from Lionsgate's Meridian Collection, which also features a reasonably good making-of documentary, an informative commentary track with Aranoa and Bardem, scenes deleted to improve the story's flow, and an excellent split-screen extra that matches storyboard sketches with footage from the finished picture. In all, the package is worthy of the film, and vice versa. Not even a Monday in the sun would be more satisfying.

For more information about Mondays in the Sun, visit Lions Gate.To order Mondays in the Sun, go to TCM Shopping.

by David Sterritt
Mondays In The Sun - Mondays In The Sun (Los Lunes Al Sol) - Fernando Leon's Critically Acclaimed 2002 Spanish Drama On Dvd

Mondays in the Sun - MONDAYS IN THE SUN (Los Lunes Al Sol) - Fernando Leon's Critically Acclaimed 2002 Spanish Drama on DVD

Mondays in the Sun, known as Los Lunes al sol in its native Spanish, begins with documentary footage of a blistering labor demonstration, shot by director Fernando León de Aranoa a few years before he embarked on the 2002 feature itself. After this the story begins; first the camera settles on a crowd of people waiting to board a ferry, and then it narrows its focus to a small group of friends who emerge as the film's main characters. The implication is that any of the folks in line for the boat ride, or any of the protesters we saw earlier, could command our attention just as easily. This democratic approach, based on the proposition that ordinary lives take on extraordinary interest if we observe them with sympathy and care, explains the movie's tagline: "This film is not based on a real story. It is based on thousands." The plot centers on several men whose lives have been disrupted by layoffs at the shipyard where they used to work. Saddled with endless free time that's become a heavy psychological burden, they while away the hours at a bar owned by Rico, who bought the place with money he got as a settlement when he lost his job. The unofficial leader of the pack is Santa Santamaria, a former welder whose nickname is too lighthearted for his scrappy, often angry personality. His friend Lino is anxious to find a new job, but after countless rejections at the unemployment office he concludes that no one will hire him because of his middle-aged looks. Reina has become a security guard at a soccer stadium, which turns out not to be much fun. José has a steadily employed wife, but her stand-up job in a fish-packing plant is destroying her legs and causing household tension. Amador downs far too much booze while pining for his wife to return from her extended visit to a relative. Rounding out this not-so-merry crew is Sergei, a Russian full of hard-to-believe stories about training as a cosmonaut before the Soviet Union went out of business. Also in the picture is Rico's teenage daughter, Nata, who flirts harmlessly with Santa and serves as a mostly silent witness to the jokes, quarrels, and sob stories that echo through the bar with hardly any changes from one day to the next. Mondays in the Sun builds a remarkable sense of human drama around these commonplace guys, even though so little happens to them that their story is scarcely a story at all. Lino dyes his hair so he'll look a little younger, then sweats so much with worry that the coloring runs down his neck. José and Ana, his long-suffering spouse, apply for a loan but instantly strike out when José erupts with rage at a system he thinks is automatically stacked against him. Reina sneaks his friends into the bleachers to watch a game at the stadium, but the view is so bad that they can't tell who scored. Amador drinks and drinks, Sergei talks and talks, and Santa seethes with discontent while earning pocket change as a babysitter, bantering with a woman he meets at a supermarket, and struggling with a big decision: Should he pay a court-ordered fine for destroying a streetlight during a union protest, or stand on his principles and go to jail instead? His marvelously off-kilter solution to this dilemma is one of the picture's high points, as is a scene where Santa reads the story of "The Grasshopper and the Ant" to a little boy he's babysitting, grows increasingly agitated about the treatment of the underemployed grasshopper, and unloads a sociopolitical tirade on the poor kid, who has no idea what's going on. With its minimalist plot, down-to-earth characters, and sensitive eye for detail, Mondays in the Sun resembles films of the Italian neorealist movement that flourished in the post-World War II years – Vittorio De Sica's moving Umberto D. and The Bicycle Thief, for instance, which also depict men cast adrift in an uncaring city. But while those movies use nonprofessional actors in the leading roles, Mondays in the Sun has an experienced cast, headed by Javier Bardem, whose moody portrayal of the temperamental Santa is the picture's rock-solid center of gravity. Luis Tosar and Celso Bugallo are equally strong as the gloomy José and the alcoholic Amador, and young Aida Folch is exactly right as Nata, the adolescent barmaid. There isn't a weak performance in the picture, right down to Laura Domínguez as the supermarket "cheese girl" whose low-key flirting provides one of the few bright spots in the largely empty life that Santa now finds himself living. The secret to making an engrossing film out of an understated story is to generate human drama without slipping into melodrama, and Aranoa rarely loses his footing. (His use of Lucio Godoy's music seems a bit cloying to me, but in the DVD commentary he praises it for giving the sweet-and-sad atmosphere he wanted.) Smart and perceptive in almost every scene, the picture fully deserves the five awards and three nominations it earned in the Goya Awards competition (Spain's equivalent of the Oscars) for the best achievements of 2002. The winners were Aranoa as best director; Bardem as best actor; Tosar as best supporting actor; José Ángel Egido, who plays Lino, as best new actor; and best picture for the movie itself. Mondays in the Sun looks and sounds terrific on the DVD from Lionsgate's Meridian Collection, which also features a reasonably good making-of documentary, an informative commentary track with Aranoa and Bardem, scenes deleted to improve the story's flow, and an excellent split-screen extra that matches storyboard sketches with footage from the finished picture. In all, the package is worthy of the film, and vice versa. Not even a Monday in the sun would be more satisfying. For more information about Mondays in the Sun, visit Lions Gate.To order Mondays in the Sun, go to TCM Shopping. by David Sterritt

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Winner of the Golden Shell for Best Film at the 2002 San Sebastian International Film Festival.

Released in United States Summer July 25, 2003

Released in United States on Video November 18, 2003

Released in United States September 2002

Released in United States 2003

Released in United States January 2003

Released in United States May 2003

Released in United States 2011

Shown at San Sebastian International Film Festival September 19-28, 2002.

Shown at Miami International Film Festival February 21 - March 3, 2003.

Shown at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival (in competition) February 28-March 9, 2003.

Shown at Palm Springs International Film Festival January 9-20, 2003.

Shown at Tribeca Film Festival (Showcase) May 3-11, 2003.

Kodak

Released in United States Summer July 25, 2003 (NY, LA)

Released in United States on Video November 18, 2003

Released in United States September 2002 (Shown at San Sebastian International Film Festival September 19-28, 2002.)

Released in United States 2003 (Shown at Miami International Film Festival February 21 - March 3, 2003.)

Released in United States 2003 (Shown at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival (in competition) February 28-March 9, 2003.)

Released in United States January 2003 (Shown at Palm Springs International Film Festival January 9-20, 2003.)

Released in United States January 2003 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (World Cinema) January 16-26, 2003.)

Released in United States May 2003 (Shown at Tribeca Film Festival (Showcase) May 3-11, 2003.)

Released in United States 2011 (Emerging Masters)