As Bestas Rodrigo Sorogoyen -
Sorogoyen is a master of the long take. The film’s infamous ten-minute argument at the village bar plays out in a single, stifling wide shot. We are forced to watch Antoine’s humiliation in real-time, unable to look away as the community’s passive aggression curdles into direct threat. Later, a nighttime chase through a cornfield utilizes disorienting POV shots, turning the familiar rural landscape into a labyrinth.
Rodrigo Sorogoyen has crafted a film that refuses to let the audience off the hook. It is a horror movie about property lines. A thriller about pronouns (us vs. them). A tragedy where the villain is the architecture of capitalism itself. as bestas rodrigo sorogoyen
As Bestas is not a comfortable watch. It is a necessary one. It holds a mirror to the rural-urban divide and asks us to see the beast within our own reflection. In an age of polarization, Sorogoyen suggests that the most dangerous animal is not the wolf in the woods—it is the human being backed into a corner with no way out but through. Sorogoyen is a master of the long take