Rafa (Dani Rovira) has never left his native Seville, Andalusia, until he meets a Basque girl named Amaia (Clara Lago), who resists his seduction techniques. Against his friends' advice, he follows her to the Basque Country after she stays the night in his house and forgets her purse. A series of misunderstandings forces Rafa to impersonate a Basque boasting of a stock featuring eight traditional Basque surnames (Gabilondo, Urdangarín, Zubizarreta, Arguiñano from the father and Igartiburu, Erentxun, Otegi and Clemente from the mother, even though Clemente is not authentically Basque).[4][n. 1] He gets more and more entangled in that character in order to please Amaia.
The weekend of its premiere, the film gathered an audience of 404,020 which resulted in box office grossing of 2.72 million euros.[6] On its second weekend its grossing increased by 56%, third best behind The Impossible and Avatar in its first ten days with a total 4.4 million euros.[7] By April it became the most watched Spanish film in Spain with more than 6.5 million viewers and the second film with the greatest box office grossing in Spain, only behind Avatar, with a box-office of more than 45 million euros (more than 62 million dollars).[8] It has grossed US$77 million in Spain[9] and a total of US$78.7 million internationally.[10][1]
Critical reception
The critics were divided about the film, but were mostly positive. For magazine Cinemanía, Carlos Marañón stressed that the movie was "extremely funny".[11] This comment was repeated in many reviews that highlighted the film is "funny",[12] and for some, "inspired and bright".[13] Federico Marín Bellón journalist of ABC, spoke of a "brave and timely movie",[12] highlighting another aspect, the opportunity of its theme, which has also been emphasized by most critics who often compared it to the French film Welcome to the Sticks. Writing for daily newspaper El País, Borja Valero even predicted it could be the movie of the year.[14]
On the negative side, Luis Martínez from El Mundo, said that the film is "a bad comedy"[15] while Jordi Costa, from El País, said the development was irregular and ended catastrophically. Fausto Fernández, in the magazine Fotogramas, labelled it as impersonal and described its development as flat.[16]
A film with the working titleCasi familia ("Almost Family") was released in 2023 as Ocho apellidos marroquís ("Eight Moroccan surnames").
Its cast does not include actors from both earlier films.[23]