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Vicente Aranda – Fata Morgana (1965)

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“Gim is a beautiful fashion model whose life is in peril. There is a homicidal killer who seek to murder her only Gim is totally unaware of her danger. The only person who seems to be sure that the killer will strike is a professor at a local collage. A police detective also believes the killer will strike but knows not the killer nor the victim. Upon speaking to the professor he has the victims identity and must find her in the mostly deserted city populated by a small group of unusual people who attempt to thwart his search.

A very strange and avant-garde thriller from Vicente Aranda the director of the highly acclaimed horror film La Novia Ensangrentada (The Blood-splattered Bride). With this, his first film, Aranda chose to use elements of giallo films (a unknown murder stalking victims and killing with a strange device) that were just starting to become popular in Europe and mix in a large amount of experimental surrealism similar to fellow Spanish language film maker Luis Buñuel. Cast in the lead role is the beautiful Teresa Gimpera who was best known to Spanish audiences at the time for her work as a model for TV and print advertising.” – dvdr box cover

http://img833.imageshack.us/img833/4493/onewx0.jpg
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http://img818.imageshack.us/img818/2532/fourch2.jpg

699MB | 01:22:00 | 608×352 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/8731AC1A67B76EC/Fata_Morgana.avi

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English hardcoded

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Albert Serra – El cant dels ocells AKA Birdsong (2008)

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The sublime and the mundane run hand-in-hand in Birdsong, Albert Serra’s stunningly photographed, intensely contemplative re-telling of the biblical journey of the Magi. Much of the sublimity derives from the film’s visuals, superbly tactile black-and-white images alive to the textures of the rocky landscape, which, along with the precise gradations of lighting (each scene seems shot at the one exact moment of day when its creation was possible) and the rustling of wind on the soundtrack, imbues the barren land with a richness of meaning commensurate with the Magi’s divine mission.

As the three men make their way across the terrain, Serra devotes huge chunks of time to the simple act of walking, fixing his camera at a distance from the men, turning their routine movements into acts worth contemplating. Much of the film’s sense of the mundane derives from the men themselves, three markedly unglamorous individuals (two are quite fat, one is very old) who bicker calmly, but these inelegant creatures also speak with wonder of angels and, like Serra’s camera, express their admiration for the latent mysteries of the everyday.

Critical comparisons between the Magi and Beckett’s tramps are not inapt, but Serra’s men evince a more subdued clownishness. In one scene, they bed down under a shade three, then complain unemphatically about the discomforts of their relative positioning, all the while barely moving. The scene’s funny, but the humor derives from such minute visual details – deliberately unemphasized in the fixed, overhead shot – as the way one of the men’s faces puffs up as he breathes. Earlier, a mesmerizing bit of underwater photography shot from below the Magi as they pull a boat out into the water starts as a bit of low comedy when one of the overweight men flops around uncouthly in front of the camera before the scene gives way to an unmixed beauty and the exact physicality of the bodies no longer marks the principal point of emphasis.

Finally, the film’s sublime spiritual climax – the men arrive in a Bethlehem so abstracted that it’s constituted by a single stone structure, then prostrate themselves at Mary’s feet, the scene becoming a virtual still while the film’s one bit of non-diegetic music, the piercing strings of the title song (“El Cant del Ocells”) rip through the soundtrack – is immediately followed by the movie’s most deflationary image – an overhead shot of the Magi, stripped to the waist, bathing in a fetid water trough. Birdsong rises to the divine on the quality of its imagery, but it always grounds its spiritual aspirations in an acceptance of the resolutely mundane. Through its long static takes and, with a sole exception, its lack of significant event, the film gives the audience ample freedom to register both sides of the equation, the striving for sublimity and the embrace of the everyday, each of which derive their power from the presence of the other.

An interview with Albert Serra

First  Don  Quichotte  in  Catalan, and now a peculiar version of the Adoration of the  Three  Kings.  How  do you describe your cinema?
I would  say  that  its  form  is  lyrical and  sophisticated,  but  its  heart  is very down to earth.

Why  do  you  twist  myths  in such  a  way?  Is  it  through  non- conformism? Revolt? Research?
I don’t twist anything. The myths are just starting points for making films which are  independent  from  them. The  faithfulness of  the  relationship that  the  images  maintain  with the  myth  as  we  know  it  in  our imaginations matters little to me.

Apart  from  its  subjects, your  cinema  presents  other particularities, notably technical: filming  in  video  or  with  non-professional  actors.  Why  these choices?
Because  it’s  easier  and  more amusing:  we  shoot  in  remote exteriors,  with  actor  friends  and Catalan-speaking  technicians,  like me,  without  undergoing  hours  of waiting,  without  the  limits  of  a script.  Saying  it  briefly,  without obligations…

Do  you  consider  yourself  as a  cinephile?  What  are  your inspirations?
Yes,  I  consider  myself  as  a cinephile,  even  if  I’ve  been  more influenced  by  life  itself,  literature, and  film  criticism.  I  find  cinema superficial.

Are you already thinking of your next film?

Yes,  unfortunately…  It’s my  job,  I don’t  have  a  choice. Of  course,  if one  day  I  have  enough money  to keep afloat without working, I will leave cinema, immediately






0.98GB | 1h 32mn | 608×368 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/4ED4B29A15412BE/El_Cant_Dels_Ocells.avi

English srt:
https://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitles/3496271/el-cant-dels-ocells-en

Language(s):Catalan
Subtitles:English

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Fernando Eimbcke & So Yong Kim – Correspondencia: Fernando Eimbcke – So Yong Kim (2011)

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“artdaily.org” wrote:
These two filmmakers belong to the same generation, and share an aesthetic approach and sense of humour and intimacy. Their correspondence produced an epistolary exchange that employs a minimalism of gesture and motif to follow the lives of the two filmmakers for a whole year.

Letters
1. July 26, 2010 (Eimbcke)
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2. September 2010 (Kim)

3. October 25, 2010 (Eimbcke)
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4. December 2010 (Kim)
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5. February 8, 2011 (Eimbcke)
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6. March 2011 (Kim)
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7. Home – March 18, 2011 (Eimbcke)

8. April 2011 (Kim)
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699MB | 0:41:04 | 704×384 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/704BD08BCF2D87B/Correspondencia_-_Fernando_Eimbcke_-_So_Yong_Kim.rar

Language:Spanish, English
Subtitles:English (.srt)

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Isaki Lacuesta – Cravan vs. Cravan (2002)

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In Chris Marker and Yannick Bellon’s Remembrance of Things to Come, a thoughtful and illuminating survey of Denis Bellon’s photo-reportage between the two world wars, the filmmakers provide a framework for the interpretation of Bellon’s artistically rendered, zeitgeist images as prescient, historical documents that, in hindsight, provide an insightful glimpse of the looming, profoundly transformative world events that would unfold at the first half of the twentieth century. However, in this subjective, often arbitrary process of contemporal assignment of the meaning of images, the intersection between logical deduction and extrapolation continues to be amorphous and untenable.In this cognitive processing of “history as prophesy”, when does documentation end and mythification begin? This ambiguity lies at the core of Isaki Lacuesta’s elegantly conceived essay film Cravan vs. Cravan on the enigma of Arthur Cravan – the legendary poet-boxer, Dadaist, writer, critic, eccentric, provocateur, editor of the notorious Left Bank cultural publication Maintenant (whose readership included such notable personalities as Ezra Pound, Maurice Ravel, Jean Cocteau, and Gertrude Stein), and nephew of famed Irish playwright and novelist Oscar Wilde who, in 1918, set alone on a boat off the coast of Mexico bound for Argentina to reunite with his expectant wife, poet Mina Loy, and disappeared.

Born Fabian Avenarius Lloyd in Lausanne, Switzerland, Cravan’s early life would be marked, not only by the abandonment of his father soon after his birth, but also by the family’s closely guarded silence over a quietly buried scandal involving the family’s famous uncle (Wilde’s imprisonment under homosexuality charges of gross indecency). Whether in search of a father figure, or simply fascinated by the sensation caused by the taboo circumstances that led to his uncle’s downfall and marginalization during the final years of his life, Cravan would become obsessed with the idea of him, even reporting fabricated sightings and conversations in articles that would be carried by such reputable newspapers as The New York Times. But more importantly, this potent combination of celebrity and scandal may also be seen as a catalyst to Cravan’s immersion in the avant-garde community of turn-of-the-century Paris, relishing his role as instigator, provocateur, and cultural critic who equally attracted the attention of Dadaists, Surrealists, Impressionists, Fauvists (most notably, his friendship with Kees Van Dongen), and especially the Futurists, whose aesthetic fascination with the speed and strength of mechanization not correlated favorably with the radicalism and bluntness of Cravan’s writing, but in some ways, also personified the physical ideals of industrial machinery with his ruggedly handsome, charismatic, intimidating, and complex persona as a pugilist and intellectual.

Moreover, in filming re-enactments and conducting personal interviews from the perspective of Frank Nicotra whose own unusual career trajectory as boxer turned filmmaker and writer (and occasional poet) bears more than a passing resemblance to that of Cravan, Lacuesta illustrates the often colliding interpenetration of documented reality and subjective memory, between creation and fabrication. This permeability of historical record may be seen in the controversial classification of Cravan as a painter, an attribution that, ironically, evolved from Cravan’s practice of publishing under an array of pseudonyms, specifically, in his use of the name Edouard Archinard for an article in Maintenant that links him (whether validly or not) to a series of paintings by an obscure, turn of the century artist, Edouard Archinard (a connection that is dismissed by Cravan scholar and editor, María Luisa Borrás). Similarly, this historical distortion may be seen in Cravan’s self-created celebrity, a penchant for fictionalization that is perhaps best exemplified by his instigated exhibition match in Barcelona with heavyweight boxing champion, Jack “Galveston Giant” Johnson (who, then plagued in America by controversy over his interracial relationships, sought refuge in France shortly after his second marriage), claiming several nebulous and unverifiable titles across Europe (including a purported match with an Olympic champion in Greece) in order to position himself as a valid contender. Sustained in the ring for six rounds only by Johnson himself who had consciously tried to prolong the fight as requested by the event’s sponsors, Cravan was easily overpowered by the heavyweight champion, a defeat that would inevitably punctuate Cravan’s departure from Europe and migration to New York City, once again turning to his cultivated associations with the European avant-gardists – a community increasingly in self-imposed exile from the Great War – this time, hosted by famed artist Marcel Duchamp (that led to his fateful encounter with Futurist muse and poet, Mina Loy).

Incorporating elements of biographic documentary, historical re-enactment, and essay film, Cravan vs. Cravan, too, invariably serves to reinforce the subject’s inexhaustible sense of irreconcilable contradiction and self re-invention, in essence, orchestrating an elaborate semblance of real-life performance art that enabled – and continues to inspire – the very transfiguration of personal memory to public mythology. Concluding with the blurry, disintegrating archived footage of Cravan in the midst of his workout – perhaps for a boxing match – unfolding in slow speed, the degraded image encapsulates not only the elusiveness of Cravan’s ephemeral (and often veiled) persona, but also the tenuous, often indefinable bounds that exist between the contextualization of a historical image and its signification.
© Acquarello www.filmref.com link






1.33GB | 1h 37mn | 758×456 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/47BB3100825F6C5/CravanvsCravan2002.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/DA8B1E1EBCB56F0/CravanvsCravan2002.part2.rar

Language(s):Catalan, Spanish, French, English
Subtitles:English

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Kikol Grau – Histeria de Cataluña AKA Catalonia’s Hysteria (2018)

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An audiovisual amalgam which, carrying on from its predecessor, Histeria de España (Spain’s Hysteria), turns the Catalonia and Spain of the independence process upside down. With Kikol Grau as the film’s Chief Minister and the most irreverent voices from the native landscape (Carlo Padial, María Cañas, etc.) making mischief, it presents recent events and hysterical historic images that are blended into a cocktail that makes for a terrible hangover. It is a choral portrait that is above all ludicrous and tragic, starring figures from popular culture ranging from Alfredo Landa and Heidi, through to Pastis & Buenri, Sergio Ramos and even Top Gun.

Codirected by
Grau , Padial , Cañas , Duque , Gracia , Cabrerizo , Crespo , Domingo , Escolano , Guinea , Gutiérrez , La Puente , Tomás , Fernández , Acedo , Turrents , Botella , Moncunill , de Crisis , J. Marín , Querol , Brotons


1.72GB | 1h 20mn | 1920×1080 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/C782A5EEE34AAF1/Kikol.Grau.2018.Catalonia%27s.Hysteria.1080p.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/B6830CADD3179C8/Kikol.Grau.2018.Catalonia%27s.Hysteria.1080p.part2.rar

Language(s):Spanish, Catalan
Subtitles:Spanish (hard)

Alejandro Amenábar – Abre los ojos AKA Open Your Eyes (1997)

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What is waking? What is dream? What is reality? What is fantasy? What is sanity? What is madness?

Such questions pervade “Open Your Eyes,” a psychological thriller directed by Alejandro Amenabar. “Open Your Eyes,” which darts among such relative novelties as virtual reality and cryogenics, is at bottom a retelling of the story of Job for a vain, materialistic, selfish age.

Handsomely filmed in Madrid with an attractive cast, this Spanish feature is unlikely to satisfy those who insist on linear storytelling and pat endings. But in its deliberately vexing way, “Open Your Eyes” is a film with enough intellectual meat on its stylish bones to give more adventurous moviegoers something to chew on afterward.


1.46GB | 1:53:49 | 704×368 | avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/37440E0EADF8EE6/Abre_los_ojos.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/A08990B6EFC184C/Abre_los_ojos.idx
http://nitroflare.com/view/E2F8B8AEB3C5A8B/Abre_los_ojos.sub

Language:Spanish
Subtitles English idx/sub

Antonio Mercero – Los pajaritos aka The birds (1974)

Alejandro González Iñárritu – 21 Grams (2003)

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Synopsis :
A freak accident brings together a critically ill mathematician, a grieving mother (Watts) and a born-again ex-con.

Plot Summary :
This is the story of three gentle persons: Paul Rivers an ailing mathematician lovelessly married to an English émigré, Christina Peck, an upper-middle-class suburban housewife, happily married and mother of two little girls, and Jack Jordan, an ex-convict who has found in his Christian faith the strength to raise a family. They will be brought together by a terrible accident that will change their lives. By the final frame, none of them will be the same as they will learn harsh truths about love, faith, courage, desire and guilt, and how chance can change our worlds irretrievably, forever.(imdb)


2.01GB | 2h 4mn | 704×384 | avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/AB9AE199DDD0954/21_Grams_%282003%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/C732529D5B8C8DA/21_Grams_%282003%29.part2.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/ACBFA9BD19C6C62/21_Grams_%282003%29.part3.rar

Language:English
Subtitles:English (srt.)


Lacasinegra art collective – Pas à Genève AKA Not in Geneva (2014)

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In September 2009 we formed a collective and we called us lacasinegra. We didn’t know exactly how, or in which way, but we just knew we wanted to make films. In our way we did different projects, audiovisual pieces, and a blog in which we thought, argue, and call into question ourselves. Us and the others. Pas à Genève is our first feature film but it is also the conclusion of this path, of the doubts that struck us as a collective, as filmmakers and as members of our generation.

On July 2011, in the midst of the “Indignados” movement in Spain, we were invited to spend a few days in Geneva. Being so far away from everything we cared for, and feeling overwhelmed by the situation we were living, we wound up defying ourselves with a titanic, perhaps absurd challenge: To film everything. Absolutely everything. Pas à Genève is the hallucinated tale of what we lived those days.


1.08GB | 1 h 6 min | 1280×720 | mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/CBEF57D6DD74EB3/Pas_a_Geneve_%28lacasinegra%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/0BD46D27380B16E/Pas_a_Geneve_%28lacasinegra%29.part2.rar

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:English hardsubbed

Albert Serra – Roi Soleil (2018)

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Louis XIV is no newcomer to Albert Serra’s filmography, the hero of his latest opus to date, THE DEATH OF LOUIS XIV (2016). ROI SOLEIL features a twin, even though, in the game of differences, it turns out that there are quite a few. Instead of Jean-Pierre Léaud, a non-professionnal actor whom Serra already worked with in his first films.


857MB | 1 h 01 min | 1280×720 | mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/A4D86CE3CBC7BC5/Roi.Soleil.2018.720p.WEB.x264-gooz.mkv

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

Albert Serra – Cuba Libre (2013)

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In this short named for the cocktail ordered at the hotel bar of Fassbinder’s BEWARE OF A HOLY WHORE, a singer serenades a small crowd in a moody nightclub who all look the part of Fassbinder characters—if not of Fassbinder himself. Serra pays homage not by mimicking Fassbinder’s style but rather by alchemically conjuring the people, places, and modes of performance most identified with him.


246MB | 18 min 11 s | 1280×720 | mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/B3E1BF698ECCE61/Cuba.Libre.2013.720p.WEB.x264-gooz.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Pedro Almodóvar – Tacones lejanos aka High Heels (1991)

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Pedro Almodovar’s films are an acquired taste, and with “High Heels” I am at last beginning to acquire it. Although the fashionable Spanish director’s most famous film, “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown,” is a favorite of many people, I had a curious experience with it: I simply could not engage it.

I saw it once, twice, three times finally in frustration and despair, and yet was unable to relate to anything on the screen. It slipped past me insubstantial as a ghost. His next film, “Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!,” seemed like one of those meaningless exercises the writers in the New York weeklies call “postmodernism,” as if that explained anything.

But now here is “High Heels,” a film of great color and vitality, and while it is transcendentally silly, I rather enjoyed that quality. It’s a tongue-in-cheek melodrama of cheerfully ridiculous implausibility, involving the lurid lives and loves of a flamboyant actress, her emotionally fraught daughter, and the people in love with them. But even in that sentence I have played a little trick, since the “people” in love with them are fewer than it seems, through a surprise that I will not destroy for Almodovar.

The film stars Marisa Paredes as Becky Del Paramo (why does that name make me think of a female impersonator?), and Victoria Abril as her daughter. After subjecting her child to an upbringing of tempestuous upheaval, Del Paramo is liberated from her husband by his convenient death (hastened helpfully by the daughter). She flies off to Madrid, I believe it is, to become a great cult star, while the daughter, left behind, becomes a TV anchorwoman and marries one of her mom’s old flames.

Almodovar’s screenplay is written like one of those soap operas in which the characters are assembled in first one and then another combination until all of the possibilities are exhausted.

Since many of the characters in this movie have more than one sex and more than one name, there are more possibilities than you might expect, but, yes, I think it would be fair to say that by the end they are indeed exhausted.

Almodovar and his cinematographer, Alberto Mayo, photograph his films with the eyes of graphic artists. He likes bold blocks of bright colors, and costumes of reds and yellows, shocking pinks and electric blues. There is a scene in the film showing nothing more than a woman driving in a car, but Almodovar films it next to a long abstract mural, so that his trademark colors unfold in the background, through the window.

The acting style of his work seems inspired by the films of Douglas Sirk and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, filtered through “Dynasty.” His actresses all seem inspired by (or inhabited by) Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, his actors seem almost deliberately like B-movie leading men, and the plots involve characters who get more upset over their own aging process than over, let us say, the deaths and tragedies of others.

Like Sirk and Fassbinder, Almodovar finds humor in the deadpan depiction of reality, as in a scene where the daughter sits at an anchor desk and reports the death of her husband. Sitting next to her is another young woman, who was having an affair with the husband, and who is translating the newscast into sign language. This scene develops into truly inspired comedy.

An Almodovar film is always an exercise in style, but “High Heels” also generates narrative energy and mystery, and provides what was, for me, a genuine surprise at the end. Like the self-contained musicals and Technicolor “women’s pictures” of the 1940s, this movie perhaps has no other ambition. It is like a painting or a graphic design, creating a world that exists only in its own terms, that does not understand the full range of human emotion, or care to. But it is accomplished with wit, style and outrage, and although it is all smoke, feathers and laughter, it works.

1.98GB | 1h 53mn | 1024×510 | mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/1C54554B278EAB6/Pedro_Almodovar_-_%281991%29_High_Heels.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/9292EE8FD76C3ED/Pedro_Almodovar_-_%281991%29_High_Heels.part2.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

Alberto Rodríguez – After (2009)

Eduardo Chapero-Jackson – Contracuerpo (2005)

Alejandro Amenábar – Mar adentro AKA The Sea Inside (2004)

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Life story of Spaniard Ramón Sampedro, who fought a 30-year campaign to win the right to end his life with dignity. Film explores Ramón’s relationships with two women: Julia, a lawyer who supports his cause, and Rosa, a local woman who wants to convince him that life is worth living. Through the gift of his love, these two women are inspired to accomplish things they never previously thought possible. Despite his wish to die, Ramón taught everyone he encountered the meaning, value and preciousness of life. Though he could not move himself, he had an uncanny ability to move others.

1.37GB | 00:59:38 | 640×272 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/D5EA2FAC085E2CA/Mar.Adentro.2004.RETAIL.DVDRip.XviD-QiX.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/3AFFADBFF960E0C/Mar.Adentro.2004.RETAIL.DVDRip.XviD-QiX.part2.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English


Alejandro Amenábar – Tesis (1996)

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Quote:
Spanish director and scriptwriter Alejandro Amenábar has gotten a fair amount of attention in the English-speaking world of late, and well-deserved it is. At the moment, he is probably best known for directing The Others, as well as directing and writing Open Your Eyes (Abre los ojos), the outstanding film that spawned a totally unnecessary remake in Vanilla Sky. Amenábar’s film Thesis (original title: Tesis) takes us back to 1996, where we can see that his success is no fluke: it has been in the cards from the beginning.

Thesis was director/writer Alejandro Amenábar’s first feature film, made when he was only 23 after deciding to stop studying film and start making it. The film Thesis begins with Ángela (Ana Torrent), a film student at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (as Amenábar was) who is working on a thesis on audiovisual violence in the media. Her research leads her toward more and more extreme examples of media violence, putting her in contact with a fellow student, Chema (Fele Martínez), who has an extensive collection of gory videos. But the real horror starts when she stumbles across evidence that behind the urban legend of “snuff” films there lies a horrifying reality… and that the murderous filmmakers involved know that she knows too much.

Though it is in fact a very entertaining, tension-filled thriller, Thesis is more than that; the film is self-reflective and critical, both of the film industry and of viewers themselves, even as they watch the movie. Throughout the film, Thesis circles around a dark dichotomy in human behavior: we don’t want to look, but we are compelled to anyway; we want to reject violence, but it draws us in. The opening scene of the film encapsulates this theme, hinting at the greater development of it in the film: Ángela is coming home on the Madrid subway when the train halts unexpectedly; the conductor informs them that a man has just committed suicide by throwing himself in front of the train. “Don’t look,” he says, but can’t help adding, “he’s been cut in two.” The faces of the disembarking passengers are filled with horror and disgust, yet they crowd around trying to get a look at the gruesome scene before they are herded away.

The character of Ángela is a perfect stand-in for the viewer in this way. Unlike the more openly voyeuristic Chema, she claims that her interest in violence is strictly academic: for her thesis. Yet we can’t help but realize that she is secretly drawn to it as well; realizing this, it disgusts her, but still compels her. Both Torrent and Martínez give us believable characters who also manage to break stereotyped “thriller” conventions about the behavior of male and female characters; they are, and remain, well-rounded and interesting characters who develop as the story unfolds. Thesis also features a young-looking Eduardo Noriega as Bosco; he appears in the protagonist’s role in Amenábar’s next film, Open Your Eyes.

From beginning to end, Thesis takes a hard look at “violence as entertainment,” pushing the viewer to be more self-aware, to recognize the potential for violence that exists within all of us and the possible consequences of satisfying some of our darker desires. The film asks, is “what the public wants” always right? Where should a filmmaker draw the line? Is there a hidden hypocrisy in the fact that we are both repelled and attracted by scenes of violence? Link

1.36GB | 2:03:51 | 624×336 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/A0A2FCE3143849D/Tesis.CD1.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/ED94DE7C8819A9C/Tesis.CD1.srt
http://nitroflare.com/view/DCCFF8B3D3512D8/Tesis.CD2.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/B88C70ED93845AE/Tesis.CD2.srt

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

Alejandro Amenábar – Himenóptero & Luna (1992)

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First Amenabar movie, made in 1991 (not 1992 as IMDb states), when Amenabar was 19.
The later `Tesis` is based on the same idea (obsession?).

Himenóptero

Luna

Himenóptero
274MB | 00:33:00 | 544×368 | avi
Luna
299MB | 00:30:01 | 640×368 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/AE7E8EABDDE5AAB/Luna.DVDRiP.Artik_SEDG_.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/A91CFB328ACC9D1/Luna.srt
http://nitroflare.com/view/E50EA3FE9321846/Himen%C3%B3ptero.DVDRiP-Artik_SEDG_.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/C9BDB529EC4EF89/Himen%C3%B3ptero.DVDRiP-ArtikSEDG.srt

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

Roberto Saura, Luis Barrios, Manel Iglesias – El partido del siglo: Puskas AKA The game of the century: Puskas (1999)

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Puskás started his career in Hungary playing for Kispest and Budapest Honvéd. He was top scorer in the Hungarian League on four occasions, and in 1948, he was the top goal scorer in Europe. During the 1950s, he was both a prominent member and captain of the Hungarian national team, known as the Mighty Magyars. In 1958, two years after the Hungarian Revolution, he emigrated to Spain where he played for Real Madrid.

While playing with Real Madrid, Puskás won four Pichichis and scored seven goals in two European Champions Cup finals. In 1995, he was recognized as the top scorer of the 20th century by the IFFHS.

In October 2009, FIFA announced the introduction of the FIFA Puskás Award, awarded to the player who has scored the “most beautiful goal” over the past year.

http://nitroflare.com/view/3AEF3C9F27BDEE3/Puskas1.avi

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:None

Achero Mañas – El Bola AKA Pellet (2000)

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Quote:
El Bola, a 12 year old boy a.k.a. “Pellet” is a 12 year old boy raised in a violent and sordid environment. Embarrassed by his family life, he avoids becoming close to classmates. The arrival of a new boy at school changes his attitude towards his classmates, and friendship. The heart of the story is the change in El Bola’s life, at almost all levels, after befriending this new classmate.

1.92GB | 1 h 27 min | 1024×436 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/60FC6E4800165CA/Achero_Ma%C3%B1as_-_%282000%29_El_Bola.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/9122F409025EB83/Achero_Ma%C3%B1as_-_%282000%29_El_Bola.part2.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

Victor Erice, Claudio Guerín & José Luis Egea – Los Desafíos aka The Challenges (1969)

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Synopsis:
Dean Selmier plays an expatriate American in each story of this trilogy. Francisco Rabal and his family star in the first feature filmed at the Rabal family home in Madrid. An over aggressive American soldier tries to put the moves on his wife and daughter before he is clubbed and thrown into the swimming pool. Part two finds a hippie couple slain at the country home of a wealthy local (Alfredo Mayo) after the young woman is offered to him for money and the boy makes love to the man’s wife. In part three, an American man, a Cuban girl, two Spanish students and a chimpanzee throw a dance party before the American plants a bomb that destroys everyone. (allmovie)

Directors:
Claudio Guerín (segment 1)
José Luis Egea (segment 2)
Víctor Erice (segment 3)

700MB | 1:40:04 | 512×304 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/DFCC3E15703CDA9/Los_desafios__1969___Claudio_Guerin_Jose_Luis_Egea_victor_Erice__DVDRip_XviD-Mp3.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/01E21AACD870724/Los_desaf%C3%83_os_%281969%29_AKA_The_Chalenges.srt

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

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