TL;DR – A beautiful story about families and what you would do for them.
Score – 4 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
What would you do for the people you love? Would you break the law? Would you
fight? Would you run? Would you hand them in to the police to get them help? In
many ways, this is one of those few things that break down the usual barriers
that we put up, that define the clear right and wrong. Today we look at a film
that explores that boundary and does not hold back.
So to set the scene, Héctor (Biel Montoro) has a flexible relationship with the
law, in that he has a very regard system of right and wrong and if it means stealing
a heater to help his Abuela Cuca (Lola Cordón) who’s heater has not been fixed
in weeks then that is fine. Things probably would have been fine but his
brother Ismael (Nacho Sánchez) let the authorities know. Sentenced to two years
in juvenile detention Héctor constantly escapes to see how far he can get. Struggling
to find a way forward the centre staff give him a dog to help train which he
calls Sheep. All is fine and he is only a month before release when one day
Sheep is gone, he has done such a good job that Sheep was adopted and that
triggers a countrywide chase for closure.