Alma, a young Spanish woman is devastated by her grandfather's descent into taciturn dementia and is convinced that his decline is caused partly by the recent selling off (by his sons) of an ancient olive tree from the family's olive grove.
She finds out that a German 'sustainable energy ' company bought the tree and has installed it in the lobby of their headquarters in Dusseldorf. She persuades her Uncle and also Rafa (who I wasn't quite sure whether he was a cousin or a farm employee) to accompany her to Dusseldorf to reclaim the tree and bring it home to grandfather.
Along the way her mission becomes celebrated by a group of people who recognise that the German company is not as sustainable as they claim to be.
Can the trio rescue the tree in time to help grandfather regain his health?
This is a moving film about family and the traditional connections to the land and how one tree can become the symbol for an environmental protest.
The Olive Tree is showing as part of the Edinburgh International Film Festival:
1800, 19 June at Cineworld and 2040, 21 June at Odeon.
You can read my other reviews from this year's film festival by following the links below:
Death is Only the Beginning - my review of The Correspondence and The Library Suicides.
The Mine.
The Islands and the Whales.
Hunt for the Wilderpeople.
Bugs - are insects the food of the future?
Disclaimer: I have a press pass for the Edinburgh International Film Festival and attended free press screenings of these films
2 comments:
Hello, sounds like a heart warming story. Thanks for sharing your review! Happy Saturday, enjoy your weekend!
Goodness checking on your recent posts ... you've seen a lot of films!
Hope you've enjoyed your week - have a great weekend
All the best Jan
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