Discover a little Hispanic animation jewel by Fernando Cortizo on the giant screen. Mystery and humour guaranteed!
The Musée-Château is pleased to present The Apostle to celebrate 10 years since it was released, as well as the acquisition of a panoply of marionettes and accessories from the actual film into the animation film collections!
Self-taught animator, in 2007 Fernando Cortizo began creating his first animation feature film, The Apostle. Released in 2012, this ambitious stop-motion animation film was selected and won at numerous international festivals and most notably won the Audience Award at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival (2013).
The Apostle mixes mystery, adventure, terror, humour and fantasy. The story of a prisoner, Ramon, who escapes from prison and goes in search of hidden loot in a remote village in the mountains near the Camino de Santiago. This village and its inhabitants are struck by a curse dating back over 600 years ago and Ramon gets himself caught in the curse.
This Spanish film aimed at teens and adults, gets its inspiration from Galician legends and folklore. Originally from Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle, Fernando Cortizo expresses some of his childhood universe and the magical dimension he associates with this area.
A must-see screening!
Original version with French subtitles
Original title: O apóstolo
Directed by: Fernando CORTIZO
Country: Spain
Year of production: 2012
Running time: 01 h 25 min
Category: Feature film
Techniques used: puppets
Version: Original Spanish version French / English subtitles
Process: Colour
Target public: Teens, Young adults
Directed by: Fernando CORTIZO
Production: ARTEFACTO PRODUCCIONES, Isabel REY
Artistic direction: Maria Hernanz
Script: Fernando Cortizo Rodriguez
Graphics: Maria Monescillos
Storyboard: Marcos Valin
Layout: Marcos Valin
Sets: Alvaro Alonso Lomba, Colin Miller
Animation: Peggy Arel
Camera: David Nardi
Compositing: Colin Miller
Music: Philip Glass
Sound: David Machado
Editing: Fernando Alfonsin
Voice: Geraldine Chaplin, Paul Naschy, Luis Tosar, Carlos Blanco, J. M. Oliveira Pico, Jorge Sanz, Celso Bugallo, Manuel Manguiña