OMDB
Home Movies Series Search
OMDB

Built by Torkel Aannestad with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource code
Barcelona
Barcelona

Barcelona (1994)

62% User Rating
1h 40min
Comedy
Drama
Romance

"Americans. Anti Americans. In love."

During the 1980s, uptight Ted Boynton is a salesman working in the Barcelona office of a Chicago-based company. He receives an unexpected visit from his cousin Fred, a naval officer who has come to Spain on a public relations mission for a U.S. fleet. Not exactly friends in the past, Ted and Fred strike up relationships with women in the Spanish city and experience conflicts -- Ted with his employer, and Fred with the Barcelona community.

Whit StillmanDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Taylor Nichols

Taylor Nichols

Ted Boynton

Chris Eigeman

Chris Eigeman

Fred Boynton

Tushka Bergen

Tushka Bergen

Montserrat Raventos

Mira Sorvino

Mira Sorvino

Marta Ferrer

Pep Munné

Pep Munné

Ramone

Hellena Taylor

Hellena Taylor

Greta

The Movie Database

Núria Badia

Aurora Boval

Jack Gilpin

Jack Gilpin

The Consul

Thomas Gibson

Thomas Gibson

Dickie Taylor

Pere Ponce

Pere Ponce

Young Doctor

The Movie Database

Laura López

Ted's Assistant

The Movie Database

Francis Creighton

Frank

Edmon Roch

Edmon Roch

Javier

The Movie Database

Diana Sassen

"Shootings in America" Woman

Àngels Bassas

Àngels Bassas

"Jazz" Woman

The Movie Database

Elisenda Bautesta

"USO Bombing" Woman

The Movie Database

Andrea Montero

1st Trade Fair Girl

The Movie Database

Paul Degen

Jurgen: "People not ants"

The Movie Database

Paca Barrera

Plain Princess

The Movie Database

Nico Baixas

Hangar Trumpeter

Debbon Ayer

Debbon Ayer

Betty

The Movie Database

Gerardo Seeliger

Dr. Ribo - Weekending Doctor

The Movie Database

Mercè Puy

Hospital Nurse

The Movie Database

Rosa Grifell

Hospital Nurse

The Movie Database

Francesco X. Canals

Marta's Other Guy

The Movie Database

Juan Martinez-Lage

Terrorist Gunman

The Movie Database

Isabel Ruiz de Villa

Sevillanas Dancer

The Movie Database

Montserat Zubiria

Sevillanas Dancer

The Movie Database

Gabriela Tubella

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Leopoldo Pomés Jr.

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Ana Sans  

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Elizabeth Sans

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Carina Murtra

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Helena Garrabou

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Nacho Fontcuberta

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Silvia Loewe

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Florencio Sueldo

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Toni Priante

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

Inés Ventós

Cool Barcelonan

The Movie Database

George H. Beane

Prof. Thompson

The Movie Database

James Shaw

Schoolboy Actor

The Movie Database

Stillman Finley

Schoolboy Actor

The Movie Database

George Andrew Johnston

Schoolboy Actor

The Movie Database

Gordon Pennoyer

Schoolboy Actor

The Movie Database

George Sim Johnston

IHSMOCO Salesman

The Movie Database

Russell Pennoyer

IHSMOCO Salesman

The Movie Database

J. Harden Rose

Audiotape voice

The Movie Database

Jonni Bassiner

Catalan Businessman

The Movie Database

Alexander Mantel

Young Ted at lake

The Movie Database

Gavin Kovaks

Young Fred at Lake

The Movie Database

Wayne Carney

Jack of IHSMOCO

The Movie Database

Joan Frank Charansonnet

Club Dancer

Rossy de Palma

Rossy de Palma

girl in party

Reviews (1)

All Reviews
T
tmdb28039023
Rating 50%

September 6, 2022

“Do you know what Dr. Johnson said? Guests, like the fish, start to stink on the third day.” “In fact, I think you'll find that I start to stink on the first day.” This exchange exemplifies the good and the bad about Barcelona; it’s full of acerbic Johnsonian sarcasm beautifully channeled by Chris Eigeman, but the third act feels more like the third day, with all that this implies. The film, about two young American cousins ​​and their misadventures with the female fauna of the titular city, has another problem. The cousins, Fred and Ted, are skillfully and competently played by Eigeman and Taylor Nichols, respectively — Nichols's forced verbal tics only manage to make him seem like an ersatz Woody Allen (unusual for for writer/director Whit Stillman, who tends to evoke favorable comparisons to the legendary filmmaker), although he makes up for this with a scene described by Fred as “some weird religious ceremony based on Glenn Miller” — but the Barcelonans they get involved with are played by Australian, English, or American actresses; this is particularly jarring when it comes to the character played by Mira Sorvino, who is neither Spanish nor has the acting ability to pass for one. Applying the Italian neorealist approach, literally any randomly selected passerby on a Barcelona sidewalk would have done a better job; on the other hand, it’s possible that my complaint is irrelevant, especially considering that the females in the story are practically interchangeable. Even though he spends most of his time courting Marta (Sorvino), Fred ends up falling in love with Montserrat (Tushka Bergen); according to him, “I've seen her in all sorts of different situations and contexts” — situations and contexts that must have occurred in scenes written but not shot, or shot but ultimately cut (the script simply shrugs it off, mentioning towards the end that “We spend hours together on the phone, and she is so fascinating and charming”). Meanwhile, Ted ends up marrying Greta (Hellena Schmied), a late addition to the plot with whom Ted doesn't share much more quality time than Fred does with Montserrat. But perhaps this is precisely the point; as Ted says, “you see a beautiful girl and immediately you’re subject to all these emotions … you haven't even talked to the girl, and you already want to get married and spend the rest of your life with her”. He suffers from "a real 'romantic illusion' problem," and yearns, "instead of a fantasy built on the pretty slope of an eyebrow or the curve of an upper lip, to see the real person. Maybe even look into her eyes and see her soul." In that sense, the film is a true reflection of, as Roger Ebert put it in his review, "a vast yearning which can only be filled by a girl" that most of us experience before we reach the age of reason; sadly, Fred doesn’t seem to outgrow this juvenile yearning during the course of the film, and there is no indication that his relationship with Greta is less based on ciliary sloping and/or lip curvature than on the "real person."

Media

View All Media
Scene

Scene

Barcelona - Trailer

Barcelona - Trailer

Recommended

View All Recommended
Mary Shelley
Metropolitan
Candyman
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Chinatown
Before Sunrise
Dead Poets Society
Parasite
The Intouchables
Forrest Gump
Avatar
Soul
12 Angry Men
Lady Bird
Room
Black Swan
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
Deadpool
The Dark Knight
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga