Film · 2020 · Thriller
Hogar
An unemployed executive is forced to sell his apartment. When he discovers that he still has the keys, he becomes obsessed with the family that now lives there and decides to recover the life he has lost, at any price.

Very common in everyday casual speech as a general-purpose exclamation. The force ranges from mild surprise to genuine anger depending on tone and context. Between friends it can be almost affectionately emphatic rather than truly offensive.
One of the most frequent expletives in informal speech. Used to express surprise, frustration, admiration or emphasis. Context and intonation determine intensity; between friends it is often almost neutral in feel despite its literal meaning.
Can be a genuine insult or a term of mock-affection depending entirely on the relationship and tone. Between close male friends, calling someone a cabrón can be warm and playful. The same word directed at a stranger in anger is seriously offensive.
La he cagado means 'I've really messed up'. One of the most common expressions for a serious mistake in informal speech. The reflexive/pronoun structure changes with subject.
A fixed idiomatic expression used to praise someone's skill or quality emphatically. Always positive and somewhat emphatic in tone.
Used to assert that one is not too dignified or above doing something others might consider beneath them. Often said defensively when someone assumes you'd refuse a task.
Conveys a sense of drifting or lurching through life without a clear plan or foothold. Often used to describe a difficult transitional period.
A very natural set phrase to refer to heavy rain in the moment it is falling. The verb caer is used for rain colloquially.
Describes being overwhelmed with work or responsibilities. Common in both professional and domestic contexts.
A very common idiomatic expression for moving to a new place, job, or situation to get a fresh start. Tone is generally positive or neutral.