Sundays (film)


Sundays is a 2025 drama film written and directed by Alauda Ruiz de Azúa. It stars newcomer Blanca Soroa along with Patricia López Arnaiz, Miguel Garcés, Juan Minujín, Mabel Rivera, and Nagore Aranburu. Set in the Basque Country, the plot follows a teenage woman pondering about the possibility of joining a cloistered convent, deepening family rifts featuring her aloof father and her more involving aunt.
The film had its world premiere at the 73rd San Sebastián International Film Festival on 22 September 2025 and went on to win the Golden Shell. BTeam Pictures released theatrically the film in Spain on 24 October 2025.

Plot

During a religious retreat with her friends, 17-year-old Ainara makes acquaintance with a mother prioress. Ainara's aunt, Maite, takes Ainara home. Ainara asks her father Iñaki about the possibility of spending more time with the nuns, while her friends are in a exchange program. While in Maite's apartment with Maite's partner Pablo and their son, Maite pumps Ainara for information about Ainara's intention to start a "vocational discernment" process and potentially become a cloistered nun. Her aunt reacts with astonishment and advises her niece to experience more of life before making such a decision.
After meetings with Ainara's "spiritual guide" Father Chema in the context of the State-subsidised religious education Ainara and her father and aunt before her have been raised, Ainara maintains her intention to continue with the spiritual process, claiming that she speaks to God and God sometimes answers her back. Ainara's grandmother María Dolores tells Ainara of the sadness that her absence would cause. Maite and Pablo's marriage is in crisis. Maite tries to persuade Ainara's friend Izaskun to try to broaden Ainara's horizons and activities. She finds out that Ainara fooled around with Mikel, a fellow choir member. While sharing the same bed in a country house with her friends, Ainara feels attracted to Mikel. Eventually, while back from choir practice in Ainara's bedroom, Mikel kisses Ainara and they start petting. They are discovered by Estíbaliz and Ainara's two younger sisters. This and Ainara's reaction in denial suggesting that Estíbaliz somewhat lied about the scene provoke Iñaki's anger and a family row at the dinner table. Maite and Iñaki visit the Mother Prioress and beg her to advise Ainara to be patient, and to allow her to study for a university degree. The Mother Prioress refuses to do so, leaving such matters in God's hands, while Maite explains to the Prioress that Ainara developed emotional issues after her mother died. Concerned about the costs, Iñaki refuses to send Ainara abroad even though he took a €310,000 loan for his restaurant. While on probation at the convent, Ainara bonds closer with a young nun.
Ainara's probation is interrupted by María Dolores' death. After the funeral, Maite explodes with rage at Iñaki, reproaching him for leaving her without an inheritance from the half of María Dolores' home and for not asking Ainara to stay, likewise suggesting that Iñaki let his daughter go because it is cheaper to look after two than three daughters. She also derides the nuns and dramatically pleads Ainara not to be fooled by them. Ainara replies that she will pray for her. Maite takes legal action to disinherit her brother and her eldest niece. Ainara takes the vows, becomes a cloistered nun, and Maite faces challenges ahead.

Production

The project, then reported to be in development, was announced in May 2024. The film is a Sayaka Producciones, Buenapinta Media, Encanta Films, Los Desencuentros Película AIE, Think Studio, Colosé Producciones, and Movistar Plus+ production, with the association of Le Pacte. In early 2025, prior to the start of filming, Ruiz de Azúa told that her previous works Lullaby and Querer were, in a way, "bricks in the house" of Sundays. Principal photography began on 20 February 2025. Shooting locations in Bilbao included the. Bet Rourich worked as cinematographer.

Release

Sundays was presented in the main competition of the 73rd San Sebastián International Film Festival on 22 September 2025. It was also selected for a 21 October 2025 screening as the opening film of the 14th Evolution Mallorca International Film Festival, and in the programmings of the 47th Montpellier International Mediterranean Film Festival, and the 38th Angers European First Film Festival. For its North American premiere, it made it to the selection of the 37th Palm Springs International Film Festival. Its festival run continued with a selection for the 22nd Glasgow Film Festival.
BTeam Pictures released the film in Spanish theatres on 24 October 2025. The film landed a €0.443 million gross in its opening weekend, good for the 4th position in the Spanish box office. By late November 2025, it had grossed around €3.2 million. It is scheduled to receive a theatrical release in France on 11 February 2026 by Le Pacte.
Le Pacte also handled international sales, closing distribution deals in the European territories of Germany and Austria, Italy, Nordic countries, the Benelux, Greece, Poland, Switzerland, Romania, Portugal and Croatia as well as deals in Latin America, including the markets of Mexico and Colombia, and Australia and New Zealand.

Reception

Alfonso Rivera of Cineuropa declared the film to be "nothing short of miraculous" wondering "how can such an apparently unattractive premise" "result in a film that seizes the viewer from the opening frames and refuses to let go until the final credits".
Jonathan Romney of ScreenDaily assessed that Ruiz de Azúa "elegantly" fuses the coming-of-age movie with the crisis-of-faith drama, with Soroa rising to the occasion on the acting side with a "moving, perfectly modulated intensity".
Elsa Fernández-Santos of El País considered the film "a sober and ambiguous family drama" that "flutters like a moth around the light of a complex debate whose certainties and contradictions remain up in the air".