A delicate sleeper of a film that movingly looks at an orphaned six-year-old's loneliness and confusion without the usual dip into sentimentality. A 6-year-old orphan goes to live with her uncle’s ...
Childhood is so often seen as a period of unbridled promise and accumulation — of things, of knowledge, of friends and family — that the death of a parent can seem like the most confounding and ...
BARCELONA — A coming-of-age told from the perspective of a six-year-old orphan who is forced to live with her aunt and uncle, “Summer 1993” is the first feature of Barcelona-based Carla Simón.
The languid yet lovely “Summer 1993,” about an orphaned girl who must adapt to a new family, explores tricky territory that few films attempt: how a child deals with grief. If the material sounds glum ...
In some ways, childhood means living at the mercy of the universe. This is especially true if it’s the 1990s and the AIDS virus has made an orphan of you. You have no say in where you live, or even in ...
Welcome to Combing the 100% Club. In this column, I’ll be reviewing and recommending lesser-known members of Rotten Tomatoes’ 100% Club — the site’s trove of films with perfect Tomatometer scores.
A 6-year-old girl, orphaned after her mother’s death, is taken in by her aunt and uncle and their young daughter. The adjustment is a difficult one, but over time a new family unit forms. That’s all ...
Watch a clip from the movie ‘Summer 1993,’ directed by Carla Simón. Photo: Oscilloscope Much of the magic of being a movie star lies in stillness—reacting subtly, or not at all, while the audience ...
About 25 minutes in, the weight of the pain in the deceptively balmy Summer 1993 hits like a rock finally settling on a shallow freshwater floor. The perspective of Carla Simón’s autobiographical ...
Children, it is said, are resilient creatures, able to survive physical and emotional difficulties while retaining few, if any, permanent scars. Although that’s generally true, it shouldn’t imply that ...