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ma ma (2015)

6.2 | Sep 11, 2015 (ES) | Drama | 01:51

After finding a lump in one of her breasts, Magda goes to visit her doctor who gives her bad news: she needs a mastectomy, preceded by severe chemo treatments. While she ponders this ill fortune at a soccer game where her son Dani participates, she attracts the attention of talent scout Arturo, who is looking for talented young players to enroll them in the junior leagues.

Featured Crew

Director, Producer, Editor, Screenplay
Producer
Director of Photography
Makeup Artist
Original Music Composer
Executive Producer, Producer
Production Design
Editor
Gaffer
Set Decoration

Cast

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Luis Tosar
Arturo
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Silvia Abascal
Chemotherapy Nurse
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Jon Kortajarena
Handsome Man #1
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Ciro Miró
Handsome Man #2
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Miguel Mota
ICU Doctor

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Mar 04, 2025
“Magda” (Penélope Cruz) is separated from the father of their son “Dani” (Teo Planell) and has just lost her seasonal teaching job as she continues to juggle the responsibilities of parenting and living. Then a bombshell arrives in the form of breast cancer and her world is turned upside down. Fortunately, though, she encounters “Arturo” (Luis Tosar) at one of her son’s less successful football matches and it turns out he’s not only an interested scout, but is also facing cancer-related issues of his own. Gradually they bond and she has a mastectomy but despite the best efforts of her doctor (Asier Etxeandia) it metastasises and just as they celebrate her pregnancy, they have to face a prognosis that both they and the young “Dani” have to come to terms with. It’s the latter stages of the film that once again confirms Cruz as a versatile and emotive actor. She portrays a woman who, despite her own ghastly predicament, is determined that her young lad will continue to enjoy a loving and stable family life, that he will never feel jealous of the new arrival and given the now inevitable denouement, she carries that off without becoming sentimental or gloopy. Teo Planell also delivers strongly too and director Julio Medem resists any temptation to turn this into a melodrama, but rather lets three actors play this out in a poignant, sometimes also quite lightly comedic fashion. In the end, this topic has hit the screens often enough before, but there is something touching and real about this film that’s worth a watch.