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Conclusion Spanish Movies: Genre, Nation and Spanish Movie

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2021

Erin K. Hogan
Affiliation:
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Summary

How Does the Panish Movie Become the Spanish Movie?

The Spanish Movie house indeed is haunted. Ramira, Roberta, Ramona, Raimunda, or Rigoberta (Alexandra Jiménez) – it is so hard even for co-stars to keep the recurring characters in Spanish cinema straight – arrives to a mansion to care for photo-sensitive Simeón (Óscar Lara), but sends him for fresh air outside where he is charred to death by the sun. The medium Gerarda (Juana Cordero), named and modelled after Geraldine Chaplin's actual Spanish nickname and heavy accent (French rather than English here) and fictional character in El orfanato (Bayona 2007), tries to locate the disappeared boy. She asks: ‘¿Qué es un fantasma, Carlos?’ (‘What is a ghost, Carlos?’), invoking the central question and main character of El espinazo del diablo (Del Toro 2001). Maligna (Teresa Lozano) may be responsible, like the suspect Benigna (Montserrat Carulla) from Bayona's film. Meanwhile, the pastime of Simeón's unconcerned sister Ofendia (Laia Alda) is to torture Faunofarfollas (Joaquín Reyes) and Hada (Michelle Jenner). Ramira, who incarnates many of Penélope Cruz's roles, falls in love with Pedro San Antón (Carlos Areces), who plays a number of Javier Bardem's award-winning parts. Perhaps this is why Pedro is bludgeoned with a Goya award statuette. Their Mar adentro (Sea Inside) (Amenábar 2004) – inspired love story culminates in a hybrid Abre los ojos (Open Your Eyes) (Amenábar 1997) – La comunidad (Common Wealth) (De la Iglesia 2000) sequence. Spanish Movie concludes with a deliberately unbelievable ‘Hollywood’ happy ending: Simeón is resurrected and the characters fly blissfully through the air together like superheroes.

Spanish Movie is, like the ‘Faunofarfollas’ named ‘Ambrosio’, an irreverent and entertaining salad of intertextual references and stock characters for Spanish cinema freaks. Ruiz Caldera's film illustrates many of the elements that form the nuevo cine con niño genre. Spanish Movie speaks to national cinema, the relationship between genre and nation, the inter textuality of genre cinema and its function. In Chapters Two, Four, and Five, I focus on continuities across the cines con niño, from the 1950s to the 2000s, arguing that similar narrative strategies serve the opposing political purposes and genre functions of the two Spains. I analysed the ideological function, Rick Altman's theorisation that follows Louis Althusser and reads genre as a vehicle for a regime's indoctrination (1999: 27), of the Francoist cine con niño in the most depth in Chapter Three.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Two cines con niño
Genre and the Child Protagonist in Fifty Years of Spanish Film (1955–2010)
, pp. 200 - 209
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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