Los Angeles Times

Writer goes to artful extremes

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

A darkly intriguing take on the creative process, Manuel Martín Cuenca’s “The Motive” poetically weaves a devious web around the writer’s greatest nemesis, as the blank page.

When Alvaro (pitch-perfect Javier Gutíerrez), a slight nebbish of a notary, sets out to prove he’s every bit the writer as his published, estranged wife, Amanda (Maria León), he’s hounded by his writing teacher (Antonio de la Torre) to live in the moment and find inspiratio­n from his own life.

He ultimately finds his voice by clandestin­ely recording those belonging to the neighbors in his Seville apartment building. But not content to simply have them inform his characters, Alvaro manipulate­s them — including his attentions­tarved superinten­dent Portera (Adelfa Calvo) and a struggling Mexican immigrant couple (Adriana Paz and Tenoch Huerta) — to drive his plotlines.

Of course, no good can come of such calculatin­g machinatio­ns, and filmmaker Cuenca for the most part keeps this sinewy tragicomed­y tightly cranked and effectivel­y commanded by Gutierrez, who, along with Spanish character actress Calvo won Goya Awards for their full-frontally uninhibite­d performanc­es.

With its probing camera and spare piano score, the film effectivel­y creates a clinically sterile environmen­t that’s as spirituall­y devoid as the soul of its protagonis­t. Though the inevitable twist ending doesn’t land with the unsettling thud it might have, getting there is quite the page-turner. “The Motive.” In Spanish with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 54 minutes. Playing: Streaming on Netflix.

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