When he was young, Ramon Sampedro made a crucial mistake by jumping from a cliff into a shallow sea, and the seafloor broke his neck, leaving him paralyzed from his neck down. 26 years later, Ramon lives in the house of his older brother Jose, lying in bed, rarely leaving the bedroom. Jose's wife Manuela is Ramon's caregiver. Lawyer Julia, suffering from Cadasil syndrome, arrives to meet Ramon, to help him in his request towards the court to get permission for assisted suicide. Hearing about his case from the media, a single mother, Rosa, visits Ramon and becomes his friend. The Spanish Supreme Court refuses Ramon's request, so he tells his friends to prepare potassium-cyanide in a glass of water, which he drinks with a straw, and dies. Ramon's friend Gene gives a farewell note to Julia, but her brain deteriorated so much that she doesn't even remember who Ramon was.
Alejandro Amenabar's magnum opus, "The Sea Inside" is a movie about disability and suicide done the right way: subtle, sophisticated, measured, with wonderful characters, it has an uncomfortable topic that many viewers would run away from, but once you start watching it, it is so fluent, absorbing and genuine, that you have to see it to the end. As uncomfortable the topic is, so much is it of an comfortable watch. It owes this success to the formula of presenting a difficult theme in a light, normal, genuine manner with humor, so much, in fact, that by the end you will see the protagonist Ramon as a character, not as a bedridden man paralyzed from the neck down. He is played by the brilliant Javier Bardem, who gives a fantastic performance, outside of all those disability-movie clichés. Amenabar has a sense for a rich movie language, as he is able to make this static story into something very cinematic thanks to a nice use of cinematic techniques. Already the opening scenes are untypical: a white square appears on the black screen, and then expands into a white rectangle, expanding until it spreads across the screen, and shows the beach, as the narrator says: "Relax... Now imagine a movie screen that unfolds and opens in front of you. Project on it your favorite place..."
In a great little scene transition, lawyer Julia asks Ramon to tell her about the day of his accident, she presses the "record" button on her voice recorder—and then there is a match cut of her hand in the same pose, but now in a different room, as she presses the "play" button, to hear the recording she made of him earlier. In a surreal, but perfectly measured dream sequence, Ramon imagines he stands up from the bed and flies through the window over hills and trees, until he reaches the beach. Little details and character interactions say everything: Rosa (excellent Lola Duenas) watches a TV report of Ramon in bed, as he says: "When you can't escape and you constantly rely on everyone else, you learn to cry by smiling, you know?" Cut to Rosa, a stranger, arriving to visit Ramon, and who bashfully gives one of the most stunning sentences to cheer him up: "And I thought, his eyes are so full of life, how could someone with those eyes want to die? Look, we all have problems, and we don't have to run from them, you know? That's why I wanted to come. To make you feel like living." Amenabar never allows the movie to fall into grey or melodramatic territory, as the movie's characters are full of life and ingenuity, including Ramon's brother Jose, who wants to forbid him to commit suicide because he is "still the oldest in this house", while he also makes fun of religion and the Spanish judicial system (the Supreme Court refuses to even allow Ramon to talk in front of them). You watch the film and are entertained. But when it ends, its ideas and way of thinking stay with you. What is life? What are we? What can we do about all these physical problems? It shows how fragile life is, always under external and internal threats, asking us to think what we can do with the time that was given to us on this world, and that kindness and humanity can surpass transience.
Grade:+++


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