The other account predates my starting Nobody Knows Anybody and it is the one I tweet from on a daily basis - it is my personal account, so it's not solely Spanish cinema-focussed (although I do tweet about Spanish cinema quite a lot). I won't be wholesale following all of the accounts that @Spanishcineblog does because that would unbalance my timeline but I am considerably chattier as @bookworm1979, so if you follow @Spanishcineblog or we've discussed films on there in the past, please feel free to say hi and I'll follow you back from there.
Thursday, 23 October 2014
Change of (twitter) address
You may have noticed that there has not been much activity on the @Spanishcineblog account lately - or that the sidebar on the left hand side now mentions two twitter accounts. I'm in the process of phasing out @Spanishcineblog and have deliberately not been tweeting much in the past month. I think twitter should be about interacting, and I don't interact that much through the blog's account anymore, for a variety of reasons but mainly because I am not logged in there often enough. I'm going to leave the account open for a while longer but will close it sooner or later.
Thursday, 16 October 2014
En tierra extraña / In a Foreign Land (Icíar Bollaín, 2014)
This post has been moved to my new blog - you can find it here.
Trailer IN A FOREIGN LAND by Iciar Bollain from Turanga Films on Vimeo.
Wednesday, 8 October 2014
Edinburgh Spanish Film Festival, 8th-12th October 2014
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| En tierra extraña / In a Foreign Land (Icíar Bollaín, 2014) |
Edinburgh kicked off its inaugural Spanish Film Festival today with the UK premiere of Icíar Bollaín's documentary - En tierra extraña / In a Foreign Land - about how Spain's financial crisis is forcing the younger generation to emigrate. The film is one of thirteen making up the varied programme - I have previously written about Una pistola en cada mano (recommended) and 15 años y un día (I've watched it so that you don't have to) - bringing a taste of Spain to Scotland.
I will be heading to Edinburgh to watch En tierra extraña and Los ilusos / The Wishful Thinkers (the latter of which I had begun to think I would never manage to see), but also on show are the multi-award winning La herida / Wounded, the Ricardo Darín-starring (so you can't go wrong) Un cuento chino / Chinese Takeaway, and the pro-choice documentary Yo decido: el tren de la libertad / I Decide: The Train of Liberty (which if you can't get to Edinburgh, is actually available - complete with English subtitles - on Vimeo). The full list of films can be found on the festival's website.
UPDATE (15/10/14): I have written a review of En tierra extraña - which was great - for Eye for Film and once that is up I'll post an extended version of it on here. I'll also be writing something about the elusive Los ilusos for here - I had mixed feelings about it (it's maybe a bit too clever for its own good), but there is plenty going on and I'm glad that I finally got the chance to see it. The festival was by all accounts a great success, so I'm hoping that there will be future editions.
Tuesday, 16 September 2014
Ocho apellidos vascos / Spanish Affair (Emilio Martínez Lázaro, 2014)
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| Dani Rovira and Clara Lago |
My review is over at Eye for Film.
Monday, 15 September 2014
10th London Spanish Film Festival, 25th September - 5th October
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| Libertarias (1996), showing as part of the Vicente Aranda retrospective |
Eye for Film have a short preview that I've written about the 10th edition of the London Spanish Film Festival, which starts next week. I'll be reviewing
- Con la pata quebrada (Diego Galán, 2013)
- Stella cadente (Lluís Miñarro, 2014)
- Tots volem el millor per a ella (Mar Coll, 2013) [I have also reviewed the film for Take One - here]
- Las maestras de la República (Pilar Pérez Solano, 2013)
- El somni (Franc Aleu, 2014)
- Baratometrajes 2.0 (Daniel San Román and Hugo Serra, 2014) [my post from earlier this year on the longer version of the documentary is here]
- Libertarias (Vicente Aranda, 1996)
- Amantes (Vicente Aranda, 1991)
- Carmen (Vicente Aranda, 2003)
Saturday, 13 September 2014
10,000 Km (David Marques-Marcet, 2014)
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| Natalia Tena and David Verdaguer |
Monday, 1 September 2014
Speaking Truth About Power: Documentary, Censorship, and Rocío
Rocío (Fernando Ruiz Vergara, 1980), a.k.a. the rabbit hole I fell down during August.
It started with a book review. I was working my way through a backlog of film magazines, when a book review (by Antonio Santamarina) for El caso Rocío: La historia de una película secuestrada por la transición (edited by Ángel del Río Sánchez, Francisco Espinosa Maestre, and José Luis Tirado) caught my eye in the May edition of Caimán Cuadernos de Cine. 'A film hijacked by the Transition' piqued my interest, as did the fact that the film was a documentary (yes, that is what I'm supposed to be looking into at the moment) and that the book came with both a copy of the uncensored version of the film and a documentary, El caso Rocío (José Luis Tirado, 2013), about the making of Rocío and its subsequent legal troubles. And then I watched it. In fact, I think I've watched Rocío half a dozen times now, but I can't really explain why it has drawn me in as it has.
I set myself challenges on here, or start projects, in an attempt to give myself a structure to write within. I'm someone who thinks through writing (anyone who has spoken to me immediately after a film viewing will know that I'm rarely coherent in my thoughts at that stage), but it's not often that I write due to a sense of compulsion - Rocío is, however, one of those instances. I wrote because the film was stuck in my head, because I couldn't find anything written about it in English (beyond a New York Times story about the trial), because in the emphasis placed on the censorship of the film people seem to have avoided writing about it as a film (which is a shame because it is an incredibly rich, and visually distinctive, piece of filmmaking), and because it tapped into the sheer enjoyment I get from properly delving into an unfamiliar film and working out how it 'functions'. I decided to focus on the two aspects that pulled me down the rabbit hole - the story of the injustice suffered by Fernando Ruiz Vergara and Rocío, and the visual components of the film itself.
What I've written is over at Mediático.
Note: the censored version of the film is available on YouTube with English subtitles.




