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  • Fina Torres' body of work has revolved around her own identity as a Venezuelan artist living and working in France, with a heavy European influence, but with a keen eye for things that are obviously very familiar to her from her native land.

    Oriana is a rare film that works slowly on the viewer until he gets to know the terrible things that happened in the hacienda once owned by wealthy people, but now is in disarray.

    Maria, as a woman, Oriana's niece, goes back to inspect the property, as she and her French husband want to dispose of it, the sooner, the better. But something happens to Maria, for whom the house has a magic spell as she steps into the dusty and unkempt main house of the hacienda, where once, she has spent summer vacations.

    Maria, we see, has an inquisitive mind. In her mind, her aunt Oriana is an enigma. We get to know the past through the eyes of Maria, as a young girl, who is the one that discovers things that are safely hidden in her aunt's closet. This is a story seen through three generations of this family, although basically the present time bears nothing on the story, or the tragedy that we get to realize happened years ago in the hacienda. We also discover why Oriana decided to stay behind, by herself, playing her piano and living in the past by herself.

    Basically, young Maria, played by Daniela Silverio, is the center of the story. As Oriana, the mysterious aunt, Doris Wells brings a dignity and a remoteness unique to the drama.

    Even though the film moves at a very slow pace, it's quite enjoyable because of the director's fine tuning behind the camera.
  • Aulic Exclusiva6 January 2002
    ...over this movie is the mystery of other people, symbolised by the unknown, hidden past. Uneasy discovery is the subject: very Proustian.

    If you are interested in action, pace, fancy shots, virtuoso transitions, and all the shenanigans that fascinate a certain segment of the film_BUFF_ "community", forget it. There is an almost Zen minimalism to the dramaturgy of this film: precisely like a South American Summer siesta. The Gothic element comes almost as an anticlimax, so perfectly is the mystery evoked. We might prefer not to discover, then? The protagonist, at the end, chooses to perpetuate her enigmas. Good for her. "The hacienda is not for sale." An outstanding Latin-American work of art.
  • Although some may think this movie is boring, in fact, it has a quite interesting background, which focus on the characters and their individual actions. Also flashbacks or "echoes" add great emphasis to the story.
  • A French woman inherits the remote, South American hacienda of her reclusive Aunt Oriane, and while preparing an inventory of the property recalls the summer when, still a teenager, she visited Oriane and tried (unsuccessfully) to pierce the mystery of her aunt's own shadowed adolescence. The first feature by director Fina Torres unfolds in layers of delicate, haunting flashbacks, with the memory of the young girl's visit leading back to the childhood of Oriane herself: her illicit romance with the adapted stable boy, and the violent response of her dictatorial father. The missing piece of the narrative puzzle, when it finally falls into place, not only solves the lingering mystery of the hacienda, but also neatly ties each flashback together, reminding us in elegant fashion how the past is never altogether past. Rarely has a debut film shown such confidence and maturity.