Krámpack

Krámpack 6.7

Dani (Fernando Romano Fernando Ramallo) is a 17-year-old Spanish teenager. The most exciting thing about his summer vacation is that his parents want to travel abroad, leaving a big seaside house with him for ten days. Nicole (Jody Wechitz Jordi Vilches) is Dani's best friend, and the two have long planned to party together. They made an appointment to go camping, met a pair of cousins, and accidentally decided to get rid of virginity. The two boys and girls danced, drank, smoked and swam at the beach during the day; when they returned to the villa with their heads full of worms after the party, they couldn't help jerking each other off-but for Nicole, it was just a way to vent. But for Dani, it already had an emotional meaning: he found himself in love with Nicole. The two boys began to be full of embarrassment and conflict, they both need to face up to their desires. ... After this summer vacation, they have all grown up a little. The director touched a 17-year-old world with inexplicably cold and exquisite strokes, a zone full of warmth, restlessness, restlessness and temptation. This is a story about growing up, which is sweet and bitter, not of the same sex. (unfolds all) Dani (Fernando Romano Fernando Ramallo) is a 17-year-old Spaniard. The most exciting thing for him during the summer vacation is that his parents want to travel abroad, leaving a big seaside house with him for ten days. Nicole (Jody Wechitz Jordi Vilches) is Dani's best friend, and the two have long planned to party together. They made an appointment to go camping, met a pair of cousins, and accidentally decided to get rid of virginity. The two boys and girls danced, drank, smoked and swam at the beach during the day; when they returned to the villa with their heads full of worms after the party, they couldn't help jerking each other off-but for Nicole, it was just a way to vent. But for Dani, it already had an emotional meaning: he found himself in love with Nicole. The two boys began to be full of embarrassment and conflict, they both need to face up to their desires. ... After this summer vacation, they have all grown up a little. The director touched a 17-year-old world with inexplicably cold and exquisite strokes, a zone full of warmth, restlessness, restlessness and temptation. This is a story about growing up, that is, sweet and bitter; it is not the curiosity of gay teenagers, but the hormonal eagerness, anxious recognition and acceptance, mixed with a gentle look back of youth and attachment. The Spanish Virgin received rave reviews at its premiere in Cannes in 2000 and won the Fabisie Film critic Award at the Chicago International Film Festival. ©Douban

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Krámpack N/A 55 Year ago