The Face of the Jellyfish

The Face of the Jellyfish

Release date : November 5, 2022
Runtime : 1h 16m
Countries of origin : Argentina /
Original Language : Spanish /
Director : Melisa Liebenthal /
Production companies : Gentil / Zona Audiovisual /
November 5, 2022 1h 16m Argentina Comedy Spanish More
4.2
User Score

Overview

It is no coincidence that the second feature by Argentinian Melisa Liebenthal begins with a quote from “Duino Elegies” by Rilke, who was concerned with existential angst. And, more prosaically, Marina, the film’s young protagonist, is faced with similar anxiety. In fact, her problem is her face. One morning, she discovers her face has changed, and she can no longer recognise herself. Not even her mother can, who bumps into her on the street and says hello to her like she would to any stranger (deadpan, surreal humor is part of the film’s recipe). Marina is thus forced to confront her identity: who is she? Is she determined by her parent’s DNA or by her ID card? Can she be identified by a family portrait, by biometrics or the love of those around her, including her Colombian boyfriend? Is she prettier now?
More »

Top Billed Cast

More

Videos

View All Videos

Images

View All Images

Recommendations

More
A
Documentary
Finnick
Comedy Adventure Animation Fantasy Family
Groot's First Steps
Animation Family Comedy Science Fiction
Gal Avatar
Science Fiction
Magnum Opus
Animation Family Science Fiction Comedy
Avataro Sentai Donbrothers The Movie: New First Love Hero
Action Adventure Fantasy Science Fiction Family
Attack on Titan
Science Fiction Action
The Woman King
Action Drama History
Robot Apocalypse
Science Fiction Action
  • title:The Face of the Jellyfish
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 2022
  • Runtime:1h 16m
  • Genres: Comedy · Drama ·
  • Countries of origin: Argentina ·
  • Original Language: Spanish ·
  • Director: Melisa Liebenthal /
  • Writers: Melisa Liebenthal · Agustín Godoy ·
  • Production companies: Gentil · Zona Audiovisual ·
  • Overview:It is no coincidence that the second feature by Argentinian Melisa Liebenthal begins with a quote from “Duino Elegies” by Rilke, who was concerned with existential angst. And, more prosaically, Marina, the film’s young protagonist, is faced with similar anxiety. In fact, her problem is her face. One morning, she discovers her face has changed, and she can no longer recognise herself. Not even her mother can, who bumps into her on the street and says hello to her like she would to any stranger (deadpan, surreal humor is part of the film’s recipe). Marina is thus forced to confront her identity: who is she? Is she determined by her parent’s DNA or by her ID card? Can she be identified by a family portrait, by biometrics or the love of those around her, including her Colombian boyfriend? Is she prettier now?
Search history
delete
Popular search