Mar Colls Locarno Title Salve Maria Pictures a Mother Who Fears Her Own Monstrosity

A founding mother of the Newest Catalan Cinema, Mar Coll, throughout a now 20 year career, has consistently questioned established thought, whether Catalan upper middle-class hypocrisy and emotional paralysis (“Three Days With the Family”), the comic patriarchy of paternal narcissism (“Matar al Padre”) and the superiority of Scandinavian social models (“The Is Not Sweden”).
In “Salve Maria,” which world premieres in main international competition at Locarno, Coll questions a taboo, even for many in 2024: Whether all women are cut out for motherhood. Largely directing her earlier works in a naturalist mode, “Salve Maria” marks a career departure, casting the film as a genre-bending psychological thriller.
Related Stories
VIP+How YouTube and Netflix Copied Each Other’s Homework

Why Beyoncé and Post Malone Will Both Score Grammy Nods for Best Country Album, Despite Contrary Approaches to the Genre
Maria, a promising novelist and new mother, is increasingly haunted by the threat of a monster: Herself. She happens across a newspaper article that comes to obsess her about a French woman in Barcelona who has drowned her 10-month-old twins in the bathtub. “From that moment, the specter of infanticide looms over Maria’s life as a haunting possibility,” the synopsis runs.
Popular on Variety
The decision to make a psychological thriller plays out throughout the film: In its retro air, 35mm format and a pulsating, omnipresent orchestral soundtrack, composed by Zeltia Montes, a Spanish Academy Goya best original score winner for Javier Bardem starrer “The Good Boss”; the gathering air of deliriousness as Maria stops hiding her neurosis, taking off to the Pyrenees to find Alice; scenes of sheer fantasy.
Sold by Be For Film, “Salve Maria” is produced by María Zamora at Elástica Films, the most active of Spanish arthouse and crossover pic production houses, and Escándalo Films, established by Sergi Casamitjana to produce the works of former students of Barcelona’s Escac film school, whose most famous alums may be J.A.Bayona and Coll herself.
Elástica Films also handles domestic distribution in Spain.

Variety caught up with Coll on the near eve of this year’s Locarno Film Festival.
Some things stay the same in “Salve Maria.” From your very first feature, 2009’s “Three Days With the Family,” you’ve questioned established middle-class thought, its precepts. Here, you raise the ante, suggesting not all mothers are apt for motherhood.
Mar Coll: Absolutely. My regular co-writer, Valentina Viso, and I always try to work from a place that is intellectually stimulating, somewhat discomfiting, and that questions assumptions. There’s always an element of critical thought in our films.
Yet, in other ways, “Salve Maria” is a departure, where your key decision, after having directed drama-comedies in a naturalist mode, is to create a mystery psychological thriller….
Yes, totally. One change is that it’s an adaptation of Katixa Agirre’s book, “Mothers Don’t,” which is genre, different as you say, from the more naturalist mode of cinema we have been making. But we wanted to recast it as a thriller. We didn’t want the film to be too intellectual. That it was more atmospheric. Looking back on it, I think it was a good idea to tell the story as we did: This sense of anguish, guilt and monstrosity: a film more about experience, of physical sensation.
Monstrosity is also a social concept. One key scene has Maria visiting a Gothic church in the Pyrenean village of Taüll…
The film talks about taboo and guilt related to the sensation that what’s happening to you negates you not just as a mother but as a person. It’s assumed that a mother, simply because of the fact of giving birth, will be capable of loving and bringing up a baby.
In the bestiary, the animals representing the sins were related to animals that existed. Yet, since the painters hadn’t seen these animals, they represented them as monsters. Given dysfunctional motherhoods are also quite unknown, they’re also thought to be monstrous. Infanticide is committed by a person who is the “other,” the monster, who’s not like us. As writers and creators, we try to understand and empathize and get closer to the person. It’s key that the painters since they didn’t know these animals, represented them as monsters.
Women not made out for maternity is still one of the great taboos of the 21st century.
But it’s not so exceptional. I think that maternity always sparks highly ambivalent emotions. The case we deal with might be one of the strongest, but they exist and there are more than you might assume. But they’re not in our moral compass. So it becomes very difficult to talk about them. It’s very difficult to understand that this is happening to you, because that makes you a failure, a monster, a bad person. Then, it becomes difficult to communicate – because of guilt, shame, stigma and ostracism, and it’s very difficult for others to detect what’s happening. People ask why Maria’s husband doesn’t realize what’s going on, but he doesn’t realize because he just can’t imagine that kind of thing can happen with Maria.
Another departure is the soundtrack….
Yes, totally composed for the film by Zeltia Montes. We went to record in Budapest. This film has been a learning curve for me in that it allowed me to play with language. When you’re making a cinema of actors, you’re looking for emotion via other channels. The producer, María Zamora, encouraged me: “Yes, yes, yes: there will be music all the time in this film.”
The use of genre in films of social point is a building trend among younger directors.
It’s generational. We wanted to make a film that was more cinematographic, maybe to stand apart from TV, and a film that has a love of language, the resources created by the narrative, and 35mm, the expressive shots and a score used like in classic films. That said, the film mixes tones to sustain its rhythm, its dramatic tension.
Like in the early scenes of María attending maternity classes, which have an almost documentary feel…
Totally, we used real mothers and a lot of babies, looking for a sense of realism. I would say that we’re making a psychological thriller, but European style, with elements for reflection: an unsettling film with characters of certain moral ambiguity, where the thriller element builds.
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety

Was Abraham Lincoln Queer? A New Docu, ‘Lover of Men’ Makes a Compelling Case That He Was

Why the Video Game Industry Can’t Shake Its Struggles

‘Born Innocent: The Redd Kross Story’ Documentary Acquired by Abramorama (EXCLUSIVE)

‘Aiming High – A Race Against the Limits’ Savors Agony of Defeat of Matterhorn Ski Event

‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’ Success Doesn’t Downplay Risky Reboots Coming to Theaters

MSNBC Films Acquires Errol Morris’ ‘Separated,’ Officially Entering Into the Doc Oscar Race (EXCLUSIVE)
Most Popular
Luke Bryan Reacts to Beyoncé’s CMA Awards Snub: ‘If You’re Gonna Make Country Albums, Come Into Our World and Be Country With…

Donald Glover Cancels 2024 Childish Gambino Tour Dates After Hospitalization: ‘I Have Surgery Scheduled and Need Time Out to Heal’

‘Joker 2’ Ending: Was That a ‘Dark Knight’ Connection? Explaining What’s Next for Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker

‘Love Is Blind' Creator Reveals Why They Didn’t Follow Leo and Brittany After Pods, if They'll Be at Reunion (EXCLUSIVE)

Rosie O'Donnell on Becoming a 'Big Sister' to the Menendez Brothers, Believes They Could Be Released From Prison in the ‘Next 30 Days’

‘That ’90s Show’ Canceled After Two Seasons on Netflix, Kurtwood Smith Says: ‘We Will Shop the Show’

Coldplay’s Chris Martin Says Playing With Michael J. Fox at Glastonbury Was ‘So Trippy’: ‘Like Being 7 and Being in Heaven…

Why Critically Panned ‘Joker 2’ Could Still Be in the Awards Race for Lady Gaga and Joaquin Phoenix

Dakota Fanning Got Asked ‘Super-Inappropriate Questions’ as a Child Actor Like ‘How Could You Have Any Friends?’ and Can ‘You Avoid Being a Tabloid…

Charli XCX Reveals Features for ‘Brat’ Remix Album Include Ariana Grande, Julian Casablancas, Tinashe and More

Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 2 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…

- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut

- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)

- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates

Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjp%2BgpaVfnLmwrsClZqaZomKwsLjLZpysm5GjsaK4zmadoqSdqHqmuMCsq6KbkWKzqrjMrGRqamNrfXqEkm9raA%3D%3D