Antonio de la Torre y Bárbara Lennie protagonizan este thriller. © Disney
Ha comenzado el rodaje de “Los Tigres”, una nueva película española que se define como un thriller atmosférico.
Antonio y Estrella son hermanos. Llevan toda la vida vinculados al mar. Antonio trabaja como buzo industrial. Estrella estudia los fondos marinos y ayuda a su hermano en la barcaza para la que trabaja. A pesar de jugarse la vida cada día, su situación económica es delicada. Una situación que puede cambiar cuando dan con un alijo de cocaína escondido en el casco de un carguero anclado en el puerto de Huelva.
“Los Tigres” está protagonizada por Antonio de la Torre (“El Reino”) y Bárbara Lennie (“Magical Girl”). Completan el reparto, Joaquín Núñez (“Grupo 7”), José Miguel Manzano Bazalo “Skone” que debuta en la actuación) y Silvia Acosta (“Mamacruz”). Por otro lado, la película está dirigida por Alberto Rodríguez (“La Isla Mínima...
Ha comenzado el rodaje de “Los Tigres”, una nueva película española que se define como un thriller atmosférico.
Antonio y Estrella son hermanos. Llevan toda la vida vinculados al mar. Antonio trabaja como buzo industrial. Estrella estudia los fondos marinos y ayuda a su hermano en la barcaza para la que trabaja. A pesar de jugarse la vida cada día, su situación económica es delicada. Una situación que puede cambiar cuando dan con un alijo de cocaína escondido en el casco de un carguero anclado en el puerto de Huelva.
“Los Tigres” está protagonizada por Antonio de la Torre (“El Reino”) y Bárbara Lennie (“Magical Girl”). Completan el reparto, Joaquín Núñez (“Grupo 7”), José Miguel Manzano Bazalo “Skone” que debuta en la actuación) y Silvia Acosta (“Mamacruz”). Por otro lado, la película está dirigida por Alberto Rodríguez (“La Isla Mínima...
- 5/12/2024
- by Marta Medina
- mundoCine
Not since Madonna got on her knees in the “Like a Prayer” video in 1989 has anyone been as horny for a saint as the heroine of Mamacruz, a housewife in her 70s who undergoes a sexual reawakening partly inspired by the holy images she, as part of her work as a seamstress, undresses and caresses on a regular basis. No one has Cruz’s (Kiti Mánver) touch when it comes to working with antique lace and fabric, the likes of which she has never worn herself, but mends and polishes so that holy statues in her church continue to dazzle.
I can’t say I blame Cruz! If ghosts can read reviews, I hope my great-grandmother doesn’t haunt me over my blasphemous memory of wanting to touch the statue of Jesus that paraded around our city on Easter Sunday. Covered merely by a small white sheet that concealed his privates,...
I can’t say I blame Cruz! If ghosts can read reviews, I hope my great-grandmother doesn’t haunt me over my blasphemous memory of wanting to touch the statue of Jesus that paraded around our city on Easter Sunday. Covered merely by a small white sheet that concealed his privates,...
- 2/6/2023
- by Jose Solís
- The Film Stage
At the heart of the Spanish Screenings are its market premieres, new titles coming onto the market post-San Sebastian, sometimes with fest runs at other smaller festivals. Variety drills down on a score of titles at this year’s event, including a clutch of 2020 Malaga fest winners.
“Amateur,”.
A 2020 Malaga Wip entry, where it won best production, Gutiérrez’s first doc feature marks a strong personal take on what home means to him. Knit by three different stories, Gutierrez, shoots vignettes of life in a small mountain village. Also an Abycine and Fidba Prize winner at Malaga.
“Antonio Machado, the Blue Days,” (Laura Hojman)
Seville-based Summer Films, which also produces “Once Again,” delivers one take on the life story of Spanish poet Antonio Machado. The second film from Hojman after 2018’s “Solar Lands,” about poet Ruben Darío’s escape from Paris to Andalusia.
“Boat Rower Girl”
Blanco’s feature debut,...
“Amateur,”.
A 2020 Malaga Wip entry, where it won best production, Gutiérrez’s first doc feature marks a strong personal take on what home means to him. Knit by three different stories, Gutierrez, shoots vignettes of life in a small mountain village. Also an Abycine and Fidba Prize winner at Malaga.
“Antonio Machado, the Blue Days,” (Laura Hojman)
Seville-based Summer Films, which also produces “Once Again,” delivers one take on the life story of Spanish poet Antonio Machado. The second film from Hojman after 2018’s “Solar Lands,” about poet Ruben Darío’s escape from Paris to Andalusia.
“Boat Rower Girl”
Blanco’s feature debut,...
- 11/17/2020
- by John Hopewell and Pablo Sandoval
- Variety Film + TV
Winner of Andalusia Cinema Awards for best new director and new actress (Silvia Acosta), Guillermo Rojas’ debut feature “Once Again” (“Una vez más”) has been acquired for international by Javier’s Krause Kaf Films.
The news comes just before “Once Again” bows in the Market Premieres section of Spain’s Malaga Festival Spanish Screenings, which run Nov. 17-20.
Rojas’ directorial feature debut, which he also wrote, “Once Again” weighs in as one of the more substantial features in the section, clocking in at 112 minutes.
Influenced by Ted Demme’s “Beautiful Girls,” Rojas has recognized in interview, “Once Again” turns on about 30 year old Abril (Acosta) who leaves London to return to her native Seville, for her grandmother’s funeral. There she re-meets Daniel (Jacinto Bobo), the love of her youth until she left him five years earlier to take up a job offer in London with Norman Foster.
Walking the...
The news comes just before “Once Again” bows in the Market Premieres section of Spain’s Malaga Festival Spanish Screenings, which run Nov. 17-20.
Rojas’ directorial feature debut, which he also wrote, “Once Again” weighs in as one of the more substantial features in the section, clocking in at 112 minutes.
Influenced by Ted Demme’s “Beautiful Girls,” Rojas has recognized in interview, “Once Again” turns on about 30 year old Abril (Acosta) who leaves London to return to her native Seville, for her grandmother’s funeral. There she re-meets Daniel (Jacinto Bobo), the love of her youth until she left him five years earlier to take up a job offer in London with Norman Foster.
Walking the...
- 11/13/2020
- by John Hopewell
- Variety Film + TV
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.