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Antonio Mercero – Planta 4ª aka The 4th Floor (2003)

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With Slaughterhouse 5 Kurt Vonnegut revealed that humour can be exploited in two ways: to make people roll over the floor laughing and to underscore the graveness of earnest problems. While Antonio Mercero’s Spanish dramatic comedy Planta 4ª (The 4th Floor) doesn’t tackle WWII but “only” possibly terminally ill children, its use of humour is similar. While it would be harsh to nickname the film Slaughterhouse 4 (the young patients of the cancer ward on the titular fourth floor all have at least one amputated limb), it shares with Vonnegut its exploitation of laughter in the face of the incomprehensible, or indeed the only sane way to confront the inexplicable madness of disease and death. Relying greatly on the acting chops of rising Spanish star Juan José Ballesta (who, though born in 1987, could teach Javier Bardem a thing or two) Planta 4ª is one of the best serious comedies ever made – and that is saying something.

The film focuses on Miguel Angel (Ballesta, from El bola), the cheerful ring leader of a small group of adolescents who are permanent patients at a cancer ward. They pass the time playing basketball in their wheelchairs, going on forbidden nightly expeditions throughout the building and even venturing to the top floor for some contact with the “chicas” or girls. The hospital personnel are quite lenient in the face of their exploits; at a staff meeting one of them sighs “We are always being too permissive”. But what a serious film this would have been if they had not allowed these youngsters their fun, including a wacky wheelchair race through the corridors and the most hilarious masturbation seen since, well, ever.

Inspired by true events and based on a play by Albert Espinosa (who co-wrote the screenplay with Ignacio del Moral and Mercero), Planta 4ª does not forget its more serious side without becoming melodramatic, which in a hospital setting is quite a feat to pull off. In the film’s emotionally most resonant scene, Miguel Angel remains alone on a day when all parents are allowed a collective visit to their offspring. A younger sibling of one of the other patients sees him and asks him where his other leg has gone. “Have you been eaten by a shark?” he wonders, before saying: “You should eat more spinach.” Ballesta, who has very few words in this scene, perfectly captures his character’s quick shifts from melancholy to regret, hope, bemusement and desperation in his expressive eyes. Miguel Angel is a rascal with a big heart and a louder voice that tries to hide the overriding human need for comfort, warmth and love. The biggest surprise is that — apart from it’s overly clichéd ending — the film itself is able to give us all of this and more (including some of the year’s best comedy), without betraying its darker undercurrents.

review by Boyd van Hoeij

705MB | 01:35:06 | 720×400 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/492A8D5838A04F7/Planta_4.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/E1C624BBA61317E/Planta_4.srt

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English


Pedro Almodóvar – Los abrazos rotos AKA Broken Embraces (2009)

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Review from DVDTalk

THE FILM
For his 17th film, Pedro Almodovar doesn’t exactly break new ground with “Broken Embraces,” instead fine-tuning his gifts and decadent cinematic appetites to a satisfying routine. A spiraling, sensual story of noirish obsession and paranoia, “Embraces” is a riveting sit, due in great part to the filmmaker’s incredible storytelling gifts, and the cast, who articulate a dreamy series of toxic encounters with sniper-like precision, tightening Almodovar’s noose with exceptional skill.

Harry Caine (Lluis Homar) is a blind writer who was once a filmmaker by the name of Mateo. When Caine learns of the death of wealthy industrialist Ernesto Martel (Jose Luis Gomez), it sends his mind reeling back to the early 1990s, when he was prepping a film with lead actress, and Martel’s lover, Lena (Penelope Cruz), while dealing with a behind-the-scenes documentary effort from Martel’s social reject son (Ruben Ochandiano). Engaging in a heated affair with Lena, Mateo learns of Martel’s violent ways, hoping to steal Lena away and finish his artistic gamble of a movie. Now over a decade later, Caine feels the rush of memories as he recalls his love affair to assistant Diego (Tamar Novas), unlocking further secrets from his close associates.

Almodovar, who extinguished his rascally ways long ago to hone his craft as a master of melodrama, doesn’t push any boundaries with “Broken Embraces.” There are no hysterical acts of tragedy or flamboyant characters drawing attention to themselves. While far from hushed, “Embraces” is the Spanish’s filmmaker most relaxed piece of work in ages, calmly turning the pages of the script, working through this knotted tale of despair with a strapping confidence. Perhaps the picture lacks the gravitas of “Volver” or “All About My Mother,” but there’s no mistaking Almodovar’s poise with “Embrace,” or his technical proficiency (aided by Rodrigo Prieto’s sumptuous cinematography).

“Embraces” explores the nature of dual identities and romantic paranoia, carefully molded by Almodovar into a mild exercise of suspense, following Caine/Mateo as his carnal cravings lead him into Martel’s trap, with Lena as the unexpected bait. Broken down into flashbacks and modern-day revelations, the filmmaker corrals a colorful cast of characters to connect a story of deception and tragedy, continually twisting perspective and tone (a portion of the film plays as satire of film production) to keep the viewer off balance and eternally curious. It’s a Telenovela saga of woe for Lena and Mateo, glazed by Almodovar with marvelous performances and a smoky ambiance of surveillance and Hitchcockian desire, accentuating the tension and the longing to captivating degrees.

1.46GB | 2:07:37 | 720×320 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/851908A71FC35FA/Los_Abrazos_Rotos.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/BBE701FDA6B0ED5/Los_Abrazos_Rotos.part2.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English srt

Albert Serra – Els noms de Crist AKA The Names of Christ (2010)

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Filmmaker Albert Serra specifically conceived the series The Names of Christ (2010) for the exhibition Are You Ready for TV? It consists of 14 episodes, with a total duration of 193 minutes, and is based on the book The Names of Christ (1572-1586), by Friar Luis de León. Serra constructs a narrative based on a free, poetic structure, which ironically deconstructs the conventions and grammars of the film, art and television worlds.

Catalonian Albert Serra’s career has been a curious one. He studied literature, but ended up becoming a film director – reluctantly, he once said, as he considers literature a higher form of art. This may explain why his films Honour of the Knights and Birdsong (IFFR 2009) were based on the literary classic Don Quichotte and the biblical story of the Three Wise Men respectively, but rendered in an unconventional manner. Serra pays more attention to cinematic atmosphere than to plot, thereby underlining the problems facing film adaptations of books.
In this sense, this experimental 14-part series sums up his entire oeuvre. The Names of Christ deals with the challenges of the translation process, from literature to film and from film to museum and from museum to television. The majority of the series, shot in Serra’s unfettered, slow style and over three hours in length, has been incorporated into the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art’s collection.

2.84GB | 3h 13mn | 1024×576 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/7881277D20E8733/The_Names_of_Christ.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/2283B37D9E7997E/The_Names_of_Christ.part2.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/AD2814BAA972A24/The_Names_of_Christ.part3.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:Spanish,English

Rubin Stein – Bailaora AKA The Flamenco dancer (2018)

Guillermo del Toro – El Laberinto Del Fauno aka Pan’s Labyrinth (2006)

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In 1944 falangist Spain, a girl, fascinated with fairy-tales, is sent along with her pregnant mother to live with her new stepfather, a ruthless captain of the Spanish army. During the night, she meets a fairy who takes her to an old faun in the center of the labyrinth. He tells her she’s a princess, but must prove her royalty by surviving three gruesome tasks. If she fails, she will never prove herself to be the the true princess and will never see her real father, the king, again.

Quote:
Set during Franco’s mopping up exercise after the Spanish Civil War, Guillermo Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth is a wonderful, dark fairy tale that, in a metaphor for Spain itself, teeters on the edge of nightmare dreamscapes of corruption, violence and the death of innocents.

6.55GB | 1h 59mn | 1280×688 | mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/88717FF47497991/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.mkv
or
http://nitroflare.com/view/BFF3EB6706530AC/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/F1440BE566CABDE/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.part2.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/3E4DE672EEFFF7E/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.part3.rar
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http://nitroflare.com/view/8A238DAFDD03581/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.part6.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/00A3D85C290EF50/Pans_Labyrinth_%282006%29.part7.rar

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:English

Isabel Coixet – Ayer No Termina Nunca AKA Yesterday Never Ends (2013)

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Year 2017. Barcelona. A couple reunites after five years of not seeing each other and after going through some tragic incidents in their past in their lives. She had stayed in Spain while he moved to Germany. Two ways of facing the current economic crisis: she preferred the idealism of staying and struggling to change the situation, and he left everything behind, a more lucid and logical point of view. When they both feel that the past is no longer important, it suddenly comes back. Unhealed wounds will always remain open.

1.58GB | 1h 38mn | 720×304 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/4DBCE467CA7858D/Ayer_No_Termina_Nunca.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/1122A35D0C5B7EF/Ayer_No_Termina_Nunca.part2.rar

Language(s):Spanish, German
Subtitles:English

Asghar Farhadi – Todos lo saben AKA Everybody Knows (2018)

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Miguel Iglesias – Destino: Estambul 68 (1967)


Rubin Stein – Tin & Tina (2013)

Antonio Maenza Blasco – Orfeo filmado en el campo de batalla (1969)

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This is a digitally transferred work print of an exceptionally rare film. There is some light residual ghosting here and there.

Quote:
In December 1968 I participated in the film Orpheus Shot on the Battlefield, which originated as a collective work, a movie without an author, but which would ultimately be attributed to Antonio Maenza in the end even though he only played the role of the director in the film. The film, which was never provided a soundtrack, was screened on several occasions with a soundtrack performed live consisting of a text for three voices and a number of musical pieces, among which were the “descent into hell” from the opera L’Orfeo by Monteverdi in the version by Edward H. Tarr, released in 1968 by Erato, “New York 1963 – America 1968” from Every One of Us by Eric Burdon and the Animals; and “The Return of the Son of the Monster Magnet” from Freak Out by [Frank Zappa and] The Mothers of Invention. After the “state of emergency” in January 1969, an epilogue was shot but it was never developed.

423MB | 37:03.320 | 704×528 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/AB9EDA0B9C67160/Orfeo_filmado_en_el_campo_de_batalla__Maenza_1969_.avi

Language:silent (Spanish text)
Subtitles:n/a

Raoul Ruiz – La maleta (1963)

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La maleta is a 1963 Chilean short film directed by Raúl Ruiz. It was Ruiz’s first film as a director.
This Expressionist short film was presumed lost for many years. When the rough footage was found in 2008, Ruiz agreed to edit it again. The new version was premiered at the Valdivia Film Festival 2008.

223MB | 19:44.495 | 602×366 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/592C7E760543EDE/La.Maleta.1963.TVRip.XviD.MP3.CLAN-SUD.avi

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:None

Cristina Alvarez Lopez and Adrian Martin – Phantasmagoria of the Interior (2015)

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PHANTASMAGORIA OF THE INTERIOR is an audiovisual essay devoted to Walerian Borowczyk’s film THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MISS OSBOURNE. Utilising the materials of the complete, restored version of the film, and its French language soundtrack, the film offers a new way of looking at, understanding and appreciating Borowczyk’s intensely cinematic art. Particular attention is paid to a painting by Vermeer of a pregnant woman, introduced early into Borowczyk’s film, and reappearing at key moments. Beginning from this painting – its content, style, and historical background – particular aspects of the film are explored: its unusual pictorial compositions; the mingling of sexuality with violence; and the association of men and women with (respectively) open and closed spaces. The film argues that Borowczyk brings a surrealist sensibility to his free adaptation of the Jekyll and Hyde story, especially emphasizing the transgressive, revolutionary role of the free-spirited Lucy Osbourne.

137MB | 14mn 31s | 824×480 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/2BE2654270D021E/Phantasmagoria_of_the_Interior.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

Giovanni Fago – O’Cangaçeiro AKA The Magnificent Bandits (1970)

Juan Pinzas – Dias de voda Aka Wedding Days [+Extras] (2002)

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from imdb:
For starters the audience must be aware of the fact that this is a film that is part of the DOGME 95 Movement, described as follows: ‘the goal of the Dogme collective is to purify film-making by refusing expensive and spectacular special effects, post-production modifications and other gimmicks. The emphasis on purity forces the filmmakers to focus on the actual story and on the actors’ performances. The audience may also be more engaged as they do not have overproduction to alienate them from the narrative, themes, and mood’ – superficial action such as murders, no special lighting and must be in color, film must be shot on location with hand held cameras, director must not be credited, etc. Given these restrictions the story and the action of DIAS DE BODA (‘WEDDING DAYS’) seem much more immediate and the lapses in fluidity of the story can be forgiven – to a point.

The story is a strange on: it is the wedding day of writer Rosendo (Monti Castiñeiras) and Sonia (Comba Campoy) and one confused family this is! Rosendo has been lovers with Sonia’s father Alejandro (Ernesto Chao) whose wife Josefina (Belén Constenla) is aware of her wealthy husband’s extramarital infidelities. Rosendo also has an ex-lover Nacho (Miguel Insua) who shows up at the wedding to create tension. Rosendo’s variegated love life seems to be centered on his need to succeed as one of Spain’s most famous writers and everyone in the wedding party is a means to an end for the conflicted Rosendo. A bit of superstition is added by Rosa (Rosa Alvarez) the lesbian sister of Sonia who reads much of the future in her Tarot cards. A film producer Fernando (Javier Gurruchaga) and his mistress Beatriz (Pilar Saavedra) add to the confusion with their own crusty relationship. As the wedding proceeds the various secrets come into the open and how the families of the couple and the Rosendo and Sonia respond to the confrontations that shape their futures winds the story to a somewhat confusing end.

Juan Pinzás is the writer and ‘director’ of this dysfunctional group and even more dysfunctional wedding and working within the confines of Dogme 95 he manages to come up with some fairly strong statements. The cast is strong enough to carry the ‘conceptual roles’ and there are many moments that are absorbing. This film is no competition with the other Dogme 95 films (‘Festen’, ‘Italian for Beginners’, ‘Mifune’s Last Song’, etc) but it does take some chances with subject matter that do make a difference. Filmed in Galicia with the language of the region, the end product on DVD is dubbed in the more often used form of Spanish and subtitled in English. This quirk detracts from the impact of the drama. Dogme 95 may have supporters but it is doubtful the concept will endure. It is an interesting experiment but takes a lot of concentration form the viewer to lift it from the level of telenovella! Grady Harp

1.29GB | 1:41:03 | 720*400 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/C67E32D189F54B8/Dias_de_voda_%28Wedding_Days%29%282002%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/83ECACB9C6E180E/Dias_de_voda_%28Wedding_Days%29%282002%29.part2.rar

Language(s):Galician
Subtitles:English (Vobsub)

Jesus Franco & Lina Romay – Confesiones Intimas de una Exhibicionista AKA Intimate Confessions Of An Exhibitionist (1983)

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Candy tells the story of her life, her dissatisfaction with her male lovers, her desire for her girlfriend Katy and the route that led her into stripping. This is 80 minutes of flesh, bordering on the hardcore, sometimes on the gynaecological, and supposedly directed by Lina Romay (Candy Coster). Her husband Jess Franco was probably on hand somewhere. Romay in 1982 is not the trim young sexpot she was in the early 70s but she loves to get stuck in and there are still moments of genuine eroticism. It’s a shame a ridiculous blond-white wig often offsets her cute, slightly buck-toothed face. This was remade by Franco in 1986 as El Mirón y la Exhibicionista as a hardcore feature.

There is a measure of controversy surrounding the authorship of this late entry in the Spanish softcore series but the balance seems to be inclined in favour of Jess Franco being the true auteur of Confesiones íntimas de una exhibicionista. Whatever the case, the credits do contain another of Franco’s beloved spurious credits, attributing the script basis to the alleged memoirs of “Candy Coster”. The latter, of course, is one of the many pseudonyms of Lina Romay, here seen in the role of a nightclub sex performer initially seen in one of her acts, as she proceeds to present herself to the audience in voice-over, paving the way for the long flashback that is the film’s main body. Candy (for this is the character’s name) awakened sexually in her teens while watching her sister (Juana de la Morena aka Mrs. Antonio Mayans) in sexual rapture with her Argentinean lover (José Ferro, dubbed by Mayans), until one day (a common occurrence in such films) she crossed into the diegesis of the “movie” she was watching and joined in the fun. This was to be the beginning of several relationships: first, an unsuccessful one with a gay writer (Mayans), then a successful but tragic union with a liberal woman (Jasmina Bell) and hr husband (Tony Skios, dubbed by Franco).
One may view this in relation to Franco’s work or to Spanish softcore cinema in general. In any case, they both coincide in that, this being 1983 (the last year of Spanish soft-porn), the makers, both because of the playing out of the old form and the imminence of the new one, have pushed this one as far as possible in the direction of hardcore, both in the wealth of sexual encounters featured and the fact that Franco seems to be essaying the curious formula of “hard softcore” (almost there, but not quite). The “biographical” story line makes that one can dispense with a narrative as such and include as many sex scenes as possible. The results, at least, are preferable to Carlos Aured’s awful incursion in the same territory, El hombre del pito mágico and Lina Romay is in fine form, to the extent that even her voice sounds less grating than usual. On the other hand, Jasmina Bell, a better-looking woman than Romay, is, once again, remarkably poor, even if less egregiously so than in Aured’s Apocalipsis sexual. At least, they all look gracious when they bow at the end before the audience, the right way to stop a film that in principle, and by virtue of the format chosen, could have gone on forever.

1.45GB | 1:21:37 | 720×416 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/C39F0BFFDABF2D9/Intimate_Confessions_Of_An_Exhibitionist_%281983%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/D1E4246EF997C7A/Intimate_Confessions_Of_An_Exhibitionist_%281983%29.part2.rar

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:English


Roberto Bodegas – Españolas en París AKA Spaniards in Paris (1971)

Albert Serra – Honor de cavalleria aka Honour of the knights (2006)

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Matt Zoller Seitz (The New York Times) wrote:
Elmore Leonard once said that the key to telling an exciting story was leaving out the parts that people skip. The “Don Quixote” adaptation “Quxiotic/Honor de Cavalleria” is composed of little else.

In adapting Miguel de Cervantes’s novel about the senile would-be knight, Don Quixote (Lluís Carbó), and his sidekick, Sancho Panza (Lluís Serrat), the film’s writer and director, Albert Serra, favors landscape imagery and natural sounds over dialogue and music.

Quixote meanders in fields of tall grass, inspects trees, ignores flies crawling on his armor or stares off into the distance while Sancho sits patiently, awaiting orders. This film’s opening section observes Quixote waiting for Sancho to fix a piece of his armor, then asking Sancho to make him a laurel wreath.

This film is a virtual definition of the phrase “acquired taste.” But if you invest yourself in Mr. Serra’s vision, the film’s emotional payoffs are devastating. They include a moment in which Quixote advises Sancho to renew his strength through prayer, a scene in which the two stare up at the sky accompanied by a rare burst of mournful acoustic guitar music, and Quixote’s near-final summation of his beliefs, which could double as Mr. Serra’s artistic philosophy: “Chivalry is the reasoning of action.”

1.84GB | 1h 47mn | 1016×572 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/C57DDB171E89AAB/Honor_de_cavalleria_-_Albert_Serra_%282006%29.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/1FE202C78244DE1/Honor_de_cavalleria_-_Albert_Serra_%282006%29.part2.rar

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

Javier Rebollo – Lo que sé de Lola AKA What I Know About Lola (2006)

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Quote:
Director Javier Rebollo’s first feature, Lola (Lo que se de Lola), was the unanimous choice of this year’s London Film Festival FIPRESCI jury. Partly shot in French and in Spanish, and located in both France and Spain, it is a visually provocative tale of a conventional loner who becomes a silent voyeur obsessed by desire and an impossible love.
Seen through Rebollo’s distinctive eye the film observes Leon (Mickael Abiteboul), a youngish man who lives in an apartment in an unexciting part of Paris where he seems to do no work but look after his bed-ridden mother (Lucienne Deschamps). His uneventful life is all about dealing quietly with the most mundane things as they need to be dealt with. For fun he prises his neighbours’ letters out of the apartment block’s letterboxes and reads them or goes to insignificant train stations to watch unknown passengers come and go. What seems to be his only motivation is the unobserved witnessing of life around him.
This quietly pursued activity is kept on a low-level until a noisy Spanish woman, Dolores, also known as Lola, moves into the flat next door. Lola (Lola Duenas) is bold and irresistible to the placid Leon. He starts writing a diary of the minute details of her life, her daily activities, her ups and downs.
After Leon’s mother dies he has nothing to distract his fascination for Lola, who, without ever getting to know her, has becomes the acute object of his desire. Although it has grown into an unwieldy obsessive desire for Leon, it has remained something that Lola is unaware of. Quietly, and for years, their separate lives run in a shadowy and eventually dangerous parallel. It is his gaze that transforms the unexceptional Lola into someone worth looking at.
The film is an intelligent working of established genres in a totally fresh way. Rebollo uses cinematographic devices subtly and serenely to represent Leon’s suppressed desire and longing set against Lola’s daily activities. His auteur approach is thoughtful and with a sense of pace that effortlessly builds a story greater than the precise screenplay.
A director with a decade of award-winning documentary and short film-making behind him, Rebollo and Duenas, who played Penelope Cruz’s sister Soledad in Almodóvar’s Volver and Rosa in Alejandro Amenabar’s The Sea Inside (Mar adentro), have collaborated throughout his career and their implicit shorthand works delicately to counter the almost inert, leaden sense of life Abiteboul instills into Leon.
Lola is a very powerful first feature that places Rebollo noticeably in a class of his own.

1.71GB | 1 h 48 min | 1021×552 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/F0C64CA71A744D3/Javier_Rebollo_-_%282006%29_What_I_Know_About_Lola.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/43F3A3D6AB0A67C/Javier_Rebollo_-_%282006%29_What_I_Know_About_Lola.part2.rar

Language:French, Spanish
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish

Carlos Vermut – Quién te cantará (2018)

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Quote:
Lila Cassen was the most successful Spanish singer of the 90s until she disappeared mysteriously from one day to the next. Ten years later, Lila is preparing her triumphant return to the stage but, shortly before the eagerly awaited date, she loses her memory as the result of an accident. Violeta is dominated by her conflictive daughter. Every night she escapes from her reality doing the only thing that makes her happy, imitating Lila Cassen in the karaoke where she works. One day Violeta receives a fascinating proposal: to teach Lila Cassen to be Lila Cassen again.

7.16GB | 2h 4mn | 1920×804 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/9299C74A04DEFC2/Quien.te.cantara.2018.SPANISH.1080p.BluRay.x264.DTS-CHD.mkv

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:English

Fernando León de Aranoa – Familia AKA Family (1996 )

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On the day of his birthday, Santiago (Juan Luiz Galiardo) hires a team of actors and actresses to play as if they were members of his family. Along the day, the personality and sentiments of each member of his fake family is disclosed to the viewer, showing their true feelings. This weird and surrealistic story is a great metaphor with the real society. In a simple way, it can be understood as a powerful and lonely man, who somehow misses his family and hires a group of actors and actresses to perform, on the day of his birthday, as if they were his lost family, as a kind of weird celebration. This type of interpretation leads the viewer to a great review of the hypocrisy of the institution `family’. But if we extend this idea further and further, the lonely and rich man might be a government, a powerful dictator, an employer, a manager, trying to build his own perfect world, represented by his family. However, even though providing all the instructions, orders, good conditions and salaries for the participants, his world may not work the way he wants. Human beings are not machines: they may use masks, hiding their real feelings, following a social behavior ruled by the society or the system. But in the end, persons have free will and even flaws in their characters and behaviors and the system may not work perfectly as planned. In the end, Santiago applauds the great performance of the players and concludes that it is better off be part of an imperfect `family’ (could be the world, the society etc.) than to live alone (or be dead…)

1.37GB | 1:34:39 | 720×400 | avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/C406C2EA3CB84E1/Familia_%281996%29_Fernando_Le%C3%B3n_de_Aranoa.part1.rar
http://nitroflare.com/view/6208FBB65A54FDA/Familia_%281996%29_Fernando_Le%C3%B3n_de_Aranoa.part2.rar

Language:Spanish
Subtitles:None

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