The Invisible Guardian
The Invisible Guardian (Spanish: El guardián invisible) is a 2017 Spanish thriller film based on the eponymous novel by Dolores Redondo.[1] A sequel, titled The Legacy of the Bones, was released on December 5, 2019. A third film, Offering to the Storm, originally expected to be released on March 27, 2020, was initially delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and finally was released on Netflix on July 24, 2020.
The Invisible Guardian | |
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Directed by | Fernando González Molina |
Starring | Marta Etura Elvira Mínguez |
Music by | Fernando Velazquez |
Release date |
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Running time | 129 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish Basque |
Plot
Policía Foral inspector Amaia Salazar, a former FBI agent, lives in Pamplona with her American husband, James, an artist. She returns to her hometown of Baztan,[2] in Navarre, to investigate the murder of a young teen, 13-year-old Ainhoa Elizasu.[3][4] Ainhoa was found naked and posed in the woods, her face scrubbed clean of makeup and her hair neatly arranged, and a cake placed on her shaved pubis. Amaia links this with the death six weeks earlier of Carla Huarte, who was strangled with the same type of rope, and fears a serial killer may be at work. Both bodies were covered with hairs from multiple animals, an oddity as none of the bodies show marks from any animals.
Amaia and James move in with her Aunt Engrasi, who raised her for most of her life. She is greeted warmly by her sister Rosaura, who is staying with Engrasi because of a fight with her husband, Freddy. Amaia's relationship is strained with her elder sister Flora, who with Rosaura now runs the family business, a commercial bakery. Flora is divorced from her ex-husband, Victor, and is resentful of Amaia, who is trying to start a family. Flora accuses Amaia of abandoning their mentally ill and abusive mother, Rosario, now in a nursing home, even though she had a pathological hatred for Amaia. James is shocked to find out that Rosario is not dead, as Amaia claimed.
Amaia instructs police officer Jonan Etxaide to look back 20 years for similar patterns and other events occurring in Baztan. He connects several murders she believes could have been committed by the same killer. She believes she is looking for an older male who was likely sexually repressed in his youth, and who would be familiar to the girls, making it likely they would go willingly with him.
The serial killer is dubbed El Basajaún ("Lord of the Woods") by the media after a Basque mythological creature.[5] Engrasi insists that the basajaún is real and a protector of the forest, and that one saved Engrasi's life when she was a girl by stopping her from falling into a cavern.
Another girl, Anne Arbizu, goes missing. Amaia is convinced she sees Anne outside her window late one night, but the next day her body is discovered in the forest, her body arranged in the same ritualized manner, dead for 24 hours. Amaia discovers Anne was having an affair with an older married man — Amaia's brother-in-law Freddy. Freddy attempts suicide because of his anguish, but after exonerating him, Amaia does not reveal the affair to the police.
The cake placed on the bodies is local txantxigorri cake. Flora states that it is of the highest quality, meaning it could come from only a handful of bakeries. When Amaia requests a sample of the flour for analysis, Flora gives her different flour than the bakery uses. Flora is arrested for obstruction but insists she was merely taking precautions as workers frequently take home flour. The lab also matches the flour from the cakes to the flour in Rosaura's home, which she takes from the bakery, but Amaia does not reveal this either.
Another young girl disappears, but Amaia is removed from the case after her captain discovers her secrecy. Detective Montés replaces her, even though Amaia suspects him of having a personal relationship with Flora. Aloisius Dupree, an FBI friend, encourages her to remove herself from the case and look at it in its entirety. Amaia thinks back to her childhood, when Rosario, in a psychotic rage, attempted to murder her at the bakery, at which point Amaia was taken to live with Engrasi.
Amaia goes to visit Rosario, who calls Amaia a bitch and attempts to bite her. She learns that Rosario, now restrained, had attacked a nurse and bitten her while calling her Amaia, and that her brother-in-law visits Rosario weekly.
Amaia and Jonan drive to Victor's house but Jonan arrives first and finds it empty while Amaia flips her car into a ravine during a thunderstorm on her way to the house. She wakes up on the ground away from her car and sees a large hairy creature in the distance and follows him. The pursuit leads her to an abandoned house where she is attacked by Victor. When she confronts him about the murders, he claims to be cleansing the valley of the filth. Amaia stabs him with scissors and runs to free the missing girl whom he has chained up. Victor follows and just as he is about to kill Amaia, Flora shoots him.
Several weeks later, Flora's book, which she dedicated to her mother, has been published while Amaia and James reveal to Rosaura and Engrasi that they expect a child. From a distance, a large hairy creature looks over the valley before going back into the forest.
Cast
- Marta Etura as Amaia Salazar
- Elvira Mínguez as Flora Salazar, Amaia's sister
- Francesc Orella as Fermín Montés
- Itziar Aizpuru as Tía Engrasi
- Nene as Jonan Etxaide
- Miquel Fernández as Padre de Amaia
- Pedro Casablanc as Comisario General
- Colin McFarlane as Aloisius Dupree
- Benn Northover as James
- Paco Tous as Dr. San Martín
- Manolo Solo as Doctor Basterra
- Ramón Barea as Alfonso Álvarez de Toledo
- Patricia López Arnaiz as Rosaura Salazar
References
- "The film based on 'The Invisible Guardian' by Dolores Redondo hits the cinemas". Pontas Agency. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
- "El "color" de Baztán, en la música de la película El guardián invisible". Europa Press (in Spanish). 18 October 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
- The Invisible Guardian (El guardián invisible), retrieved 2018-07-08
- Mora, Rosa (17 January 2013). "La fascinación de 'El guardián invisible'". El País. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
- Montoya, Àlex (22 February 2017). "'El Guardián Invisible': El heroísmo femenino de Marta Etura". Fotogramas (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 July 2018.