Antoine and Olga, a French couple, have been living in a small village in Galicia for a long time. They practice eco-responsible agriculture and restore abandoned houses to facilitate repopulation. Everything should be idyllic but for their opposition to a wind turbine project that creates a serious conflict with their neighbors. The tension will rise to the point of irreparability.
Antoine and Olga, a French couple, have been living in a small village in Galicia for a long time. They practice eco-responsible agriculture and restore abandoned houses to facilitate repopulation. Everything should be idyllic but for their opposition to a wind turbine project that creates a serious conflict with their neighbors. The tension will rise to the point of irreparability.
The film receives a neutral rating due to its highly nuanced portrayal of an irreconcilable conflict, meticulously building empathy for both the idealistic 'outsider' environmentalists and the traditional, economically struggling local villagers, thereby transcending explicit ideological advocacy.
The movie features traditional casting that reflects its rural European setting, without intentional race or gender swaps. Its narrative focuses on human conflict, xenophobia, and environmental themes, rather than explicitly critiquing or centering on traditional identities or explicit DEI themes.
The film "The Beasts" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative centers on a rural thriller about a couple's escalating conflict with their neighbors over land and a wind farm project, with no queer representation.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The Beasts is an original film featuring characters created for this specific production. There are no pre-existing canonical or historical characters whose gender could have been altered from prior source material or historical records.
The film "The Beasts" is an original story, not an adaptation of existing material, a biopic, or a reboot with legacy characters. Therefore, no characters have a pre-established canonical or historical race to be altered.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources