Cell 211: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Cell_211_4232.jpg|frame]]
[[File:Cell_211_4232.jpg|frame]]


''Cell 211'' is a 2009 Spanish film directed by Daniel Monzon. The protagonist, Juan Oliver ([[The Danza|Juan Diego Botto]]), is a young man [[Happily Married]] to the beautiful Elena (Marta Etura), who is 6-months pregnant with their first child, and this is the first day in his new job. All well and right, if that job wasn't as a prison guard and there was a riot in the High Security zone led by the scary convict Malamadre (Luis Tosar) that very same day. Now alone and trapped inside [[Title Drop|Cell 211]], Juan must disguise himself and pretend to be another inmate in order to guarantee his own safety, all while trying to draw a plan to get him out of there.
'''''Cell 211''''' is a 2009 Spanish film directed by Daniel Monzon. The protagonist, Juan Oliver ([[The Danza|Juan Diego Botto]]), is a young man [[Happily Married]] to the beautiful Elena (Marta Etura), who is 6-months pregnant with their first child, and this is the first day in his new job. All well and right, if that job wasn't as a prison guard and there was a riot in the High Security zone led by the scary convict Malamadre (Luis Tosar) that very same day. Now alone and trapped inside [[Title Drop|Cell 211]], Juan must disguise himself and pretend to be another inmate in order to guarantee his own safety, all while trying to draw a plan to get him out of there.


The problem is that [[Gone Horribly Right|he does it so well]], however, that soon he becomes something of a second in command to Malamadre. And everything [[It Got Worse|gets worse]] from there. Very, very, ''very'' worse.
The problem is that [[Gone Horribly Right|he does it so well]], however, that soon he becomes something of a second in command to Malamadre. And everything [[It Got Worse|gets worse]] from there. Very, very, ''very'' worse.
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{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
* [[Alternate Character Interpretation]]
* [[Alternate Character Interpretation]]{{context|reason=Who? How?}}
* [[Anti-Hero]]: Malamadre, though he's introduced as a [[Complete Monster]] (He isn't).
* [[Anti-Hero]]: Malamadre, though he's introduced as a [[Complete Monster]] (He isn't).
* [[As Long As It Sounds Foreign]]: Carlos Bardem ([[Poor Man's Substitute|brother to most famous Javier]]) seems to be aiming for a "generic Latin American" accent more than for a Colombian one.
* [[As Long as It Sounds Foreign]]: Carlos Bardem ([[Poor Man's Substitute|brother to most famous Javier]]) seems to be aiming for a "generic Latin American" accent more than for a Colombian one.
* [[The Alcatraz]]: The SWAT team barricades the prison, preventing anyone from escaping.
* [[The Alcatraz]]: The SWAT team barricades the prison, preventing anyone from escaping.
* [[Badass Baritone]]: Malamadre.
* [[Badass Baritone]]: Malamadre.
* [[Bad Cop Incompetent Cop]]: Oh, boy.
* [[Bad Cop, Incompetent Cop]]: Oh, boy.
* {{spoiler|[[The Bad Guy Wins]]: Very, very debatably, this is what happens if you consider Malamadre to be the Bad Guy, since he survives his assassination attempt, makes the riot spread to other prisons, gets the Government to make a public declaration accepting the rioters demands and still manages to (though it's unclear) kill the ETA terrorists as he planned from the beginning. If you consider the prison staff / Government to be the Bad Guy, however, then it's an epic fail on their part.}}
* {{spoiler|[[The Bad Guy Wins]]: Very, very debatably, this is what happens if you consider Malamadre to be the Bad Guy, since he survives his assassination attempt, makes the riot spread to other prisons, gets the Government to make a public declaration accepting the rioters demands and still manages to (though it's unclear) kill the ETA terrorists as he planned from the beginning. If you consider the prison staff / Government to be the Bad Guy, however, then it's an epic fail on their part.}}
* [[Bald of Evil]] / [[Bald of Awesome]]: Malamadre, depending of your pick.
* [[Bald of Evil]] / [[Bald of Awesome]]: Malamadre, depending of your pick.
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[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Cell 211]]
[[Category:Cell 211]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 19:32, 2 October 2020

Cell 211 is a 2009 Spanish film directed by Daniel Monzon. The protagonist, Juan Oliver (Juan Diego Botto), is a young man Happily Married to the beautiful Elena (Marta Etura), who is 6-months pregnant with their first child, and this is the first day in his new job. All well and right, if that job wasn't as a prison guard and there was a riot in the High Security zone led by the scary convict Malamadre (Luis Tosar) that very same day. Now alone and trapped inside Cell 211, Juan must disguise himself and pretend to be another inmate in order to guarantee his own safety, all while trying to draw a plan to get him out of there.

The problem is that he does it so well, however, that soon he becomes something of a second in command to Malamadre. And everything gets worse from there. Very, very, very worse.

Though taking place in a prison, the movie does not follow most of the tropes associated with the prison genre. It won 22 awards, including the Goya award for Best Spanish Film.

Tropes used in Cell 211 include: