Medem mirrors this by making the film itself feel like a novel being written in real-time. We jump between "Chapter One" and "Chapter Three," between a remote lighthouse and a gritty Madrid apartment, between a father searching for his lost daughter and a woman searching for a man who may be a ghost. The result is dizzying, but never confusing. It is the logic of a dream, or a memory: emotionally true, even when factually impossible.
The film opens with a frantic Lucia (Paz Vega, luminous and raw) fleeing Madrid after the sudden disappearance of her lover, Lorenzo (Tristán Ulloa), a novelist trapped in a decade-long creative and emotional drought. She ends up on the very island where Lorenzo once sought refuge, and where his past—and her future—collide. But Medem doesn't do linear. He gives us a narrative ouroboros: a story that eats its own tail, looping backward and forward through sex, loss, a child named Moon, a hidden sextape, and a woman who may or may not have fallen from a cliff. -18 - Sex And LuciaHD
For those who let it wash over them, it becomes less a film and more a place you’ve somehow always lived. An aching, beautiful, and profoundly adult fairy tale. Medem mirrors this by making the film itself