20 reviews
This serious/ironic film results to be a nice comedy with a Spanish all-star-cast in which a movie troupe shooting a film about Catholic Kings and Granada conquest . This is an enjoyable and light comedy set nearly twenty years after the events of "La Niña de tus Ojos" that was set during the Spanish Civil War and in the Nazi Germany . A very pleasant comedy plenty of humor , emotion , sensitive scenes and mayhem . Macarena Granada (Penelope Cruz) , has become a Hollywood star and married to a famous American director , as she goes back to Spain to film a blockbuster about Queen Isabella I of Castile . In Madrid, not only will she meet up again with her old friends and partners from the troupe who played ¨La Niña de tus ojos¨. The US/Spanish company moves to Madrid surroundings to make a film in co-production . During the Fifties , the shooting troupe goes is filming a joint production Spain/USA and including a filmmaker who bears remarkable resemblance to John Ford . Besides the problems of any movie set , add to the tensions , as the former director (Antonio Resines) is detained and the actors cooperate with a common objective in hopes of freeing him from one of Franco's prison , as they he will also have to contend with the dictatorial regime. Soon some problems start to arise , the always slept filmmaker (Clive Revill) and the rest of the crew (Jorge Sanz , Neus Asensi , Rosa Maria Sarda , Loles Leon, Santiago Segura , Jesus Bonilla) encourage for the good of the filming .
This is an entertaining and fun picture shot by Goya Award Winning Fernando Trueba , the director of ¨Belle Epoque¨in which we're immersed in the 1950s . Comedy with historical background and movie troupe way-of-life elements ; adding culture and politics , including enjoyable performances and adequate set design . This is a dramady which manages to blend comedy and drama and falls on its face with an amusing screenplay which is little more than a whole lot of bantering and busy work . La reina de España (2016) results to be other of the innumerable stories to deal with deeds regarding the Francoist period , but including twisted messes, discussion , jealousies , filming troubles, antics , romance and prison escapades . While in La niña de tus ojos (1998) the director looked exactly like Fritz lang in La reina de España (2016) , the director played by Clive Revill looks like John Ford . Based on true events during the filming of a lot of movies in Spain in the late 50s and 60s, mostly produced by Samuel Bronston, and specially in Madrid surroundings , Navacerrada, Colmenar Viejo , La Pedriza in which was shot El Cid and The Fall of the Roman Empire directed by Antony Mann , in fact , Penelope Cruz role is Sara Montiel-looklike who married American director Anthony Mann . An agreeable story plenty of amusing moments , moving feelings and fun finale .. It is as beautifully filmed as it is written and acted . This is one of those rare gems that does not stray from its purpose - to be a celebration of love and romance - and comic tale of a company who suffers several dangers and funny situations during a hectic time . This is an tragicomedy that blends tragic elements , humor and irony . Director Fernando Trueba , also writes the interesting script and filmed in his usual formal and luxurious style , without leaving a trace the joyful themes , in terms of fun and narrative excitement . Stars Penelopé Cruz as Diva Macarena Granada who returns from Hollywood to Spain to shoot a US blockbuster entitled The Queen of Spain. Unforgettable Penelope Cruz , as she will breathe life into Isabella I of Castile and she parades sexily at her best and more relaxed and enticing than ever . The hit of the show is undoubtedly for the fetching Penelope who gives one of the best screen acting . Very good secondary cast formed by Spanish familiar faces such as Rosa Maria Sarda , Neus Asensi , Santiago Segura , Jesus Bonilla , Ramón Barea, Anabel Alonso , Jesús Bonilla , Carlos Areces , Gemma Cuervo , Guillermo Toledo , Julián Villagrán , Ramón Agirre, Arturo Ripstein, Secun de la Rosa and some American actors as Mandy Patinkin and Cary Elwes . Evocative and jolly musical score by Zbigniew Preisner , including sone songs marvelously sung by Penelope Cruz . In addition , a spotless pictorial cinematography by Jose Luis Alcaine and a willingness , almost perfect of the elements of each shot , every sequence , every space ; being filmed on location in Alpedrete, Moralzarzal, Madrid, and Budapest, Hungary. The picture is entertaining and well worth your time . The film is light and never somber, no small accomplishment from Fernando Trueba and his team.
This simple, delightful motion picture was professionally directed by Fernando Trueba , though inferior to ¨La Niña de tus ojos¨, in fact it failed at the box office . Trueba's first success was Ópera Prima (1980) following the style of the "Madrid comedy". He had major success with Sé Infiel y No mires Quién (1985) also known as : Be Wanton and Tread No Shame , starting a longer collaboration with the producer Andrés Vicente Gómez . He went on directing numerous successes such as Coarse salt , Too Much , Milagro de Candeal , Year of Enlightment , The Girl of Your Dreams , Calle 54 , Embrujo De Shanghai , Chico and Rita and recently : The Artist and the Model . Trueba was President of the Spanish Academy of Motion Picture Arts and he received the 1994 Oscar for Best Foreign Film to Belle Epoque (1992) .
This is an entertaining and fun picture shot by Goya Award Winning Fernando Trueba , the director of ¨Belle Epoque¨in which we're immersed in the 1950s . Comedy with historical background and movie troupe way-of-life elements ; adding culture and politics , including enjoyable performances and adequate set design . This is a dramady which manages to blend comedy and drama and falls on its face with an amusing screenplay which is little more than a whole lot of bantering and busy work . La reina de España (2016) results to be other of the innumerable stories to deal with deeds regarding the Francoist period , but including twisted messes, discussion , jealousies , filming troubles, antics , romance and prison escapades . While in La niña de tus ojos (1998) the director looked exactly like Fritz lang in La reina de España (2016) , the director played by Clive Revill looks like John Ford . Based on true events during the filming of a lot of movies in Spain in the late 50s and 60s, mostly produced by Samuel Bronston, and specially in Madrid surroundings , Navacerrada, Colmenar Viejo , La Pedriza in which was shot El Cid and The Fall of the Roman Empire directed by Antony Mann , in fact , Penelope Cruz role is Sara Montiel-looklike who married American director Anthony Mann . An agreeable story plenty of amusing moments , moving feelings and fun finale .. It is as beautifully filmed as it is written and acted . This is one of those rare gems that does not stray from its purpose - to be a celebration of love and romance - and comic tale of a company who suffers several dangers and funny situations during a hectic time . This is an tragicomedy that blends tragic elements , humor and irony . Director Fernando Trueba , also writes the interesting script and filmed in his usual formal and luxurious style , without leaving a trace the joyful themes , in terms of fun and narrative excitement . Stars Penelopé Cruz as Diva Macarena Granada who returns from Hollywood to Spain to shoot a US blockbuster entitled The Queen of Spain. Unforgettable Penelope Cruz , as she will breathe life into Isabella I of Castile and she parades sexily at her best and more relaxed and enticing than ever . The hit of the show is undoubtedly for the fetching Penelope who gives one of the best screen acting . Very good secondary cast formed by Spanish familiar faces such as Rosa Maria Sarda , Neus Asensi , Santiago Segura , Jesus Bonilla , Ramón Barea, Anabel Alonso , Jesús Bonilla , Carlos Areces , Gemma Cuervo , Guillermo Toledo , Julián Villagrán , Ramón Agirre, Arturo Ripstein, Secun de la Rosa and some American actors as Mandy Patinkin and Cary Elwes . Evocative and jolly musical score by Zbigniew Preisner , including sone songs marvelously sung by Penelope Cruz . In addition , a spotless pictorial cinematography by Jose Luis Alcaine and a willingness , almost perfect of the elements of each shot , every sequence , every space ; being filmed on location in Alpedrete, Moralzarzal, Madrid, and Budapest, Hungary. The picture is entertaining and well worth your time . The film is light and never somber, no small accomplishment from Fernando Trueba and his team.
This simple, delightful motion picture was professionally directed by Fernando Trueba , though inferior to ¨La Niña de tus ojos¨, in fact it failed at the box office . Trueba's first success was Ópera Prima (1980) following the style of the "Madrid comedy". He had major success with Sé Infiel y No mires Quién (1985) also known as : Be Wanton and Tread No Shame , starting a longer collaboration with the producer Andrés Vicente Gómez . He went on directing numerous successes such as Coarse salt , Too Much , Milagro de Candeal , Year of Enlightment , The Girl of Your Dreams , Calle 54 , Embrujo De Shanghai , Chico and Rita and recently : The Artist and the Model . Trueba was President of the Spanish Academy of Motion Picture Arts and he received the 1994 Oscar for Best Foreign Film to Belle Epoque (1992) .
24 October 2017. This is a movie that doesn't really offer up a distinct movie genre but sort of a blurry drama that the movie trailers promoted as a distinctive period comedy. Mandy Pantinkin as a movie producer has an Italian twin doppelganger in this movie starring Antonio Resines playing Blas Fontiveros, a former movie wonk who was thought dead but was placed in a military war camp during World War II and has come back to a changed state of both the film industry and his past personal relationships.
Cary Elwes as an actor Gary Jones portraying the King is over the top with his performance and his odd choice of a deep guttural voice. His presence as an extended cameo actually seems too distracting and so prominent as to off-balance all the rest of what's going on the movie while he's in a scene. Interestingly, it's possible that either Elwes was miscast in this movie or the character of Gary Jones was miscast in the movie within the movie. It's hard to tell. During the second quarter of the movie, it seems to drag off at times onto tangential and more boring scenes that don't have anything to do with the main storyline of the movie.
A fourth of the movie begins, unlike what the trailers suggest, is more about a former movie wonk, Blas, than the dynamic comedy-drama performance of Penelope Cruz. Which actually results in this moving seemingly having two parallel storyline occurring in one movie by the time Cruz manages to take command of her scenes. Resines' scenes are plodding and slow and uninspired. As for Penelope Cruz along with Mandy Pantinkin, they seem to be the only characters who can energize and bring a sparkle of interesting entertainment to the screen in the movie. Cruz has a lively, delicious presence on the screen. Her on-screen presence and her ability to diversify or reveal different characters is vivacious and electric as well as tender and heart-rending. Yet the cavalier attitude towards sexual conquests and affairs seems to find some contradiction in the apparent common acceptance in the movie which may be at odds with perhaps an American audience. Not that such sexual proclivity can't be filmed in a provocative and appealing way as Shirley MacLaine achieved in her Golden Globe nominated performance in Woman Times Seven (1967) about infidelity in France.
There's a wonderful singing scene being filmed midway through the movie that seems to capture a cinematographic ambiance that could have been the core of this movie, like other amazing character-driven movies about the film industry such as Saving Mr. Banks (2013) about the Mary Popping's story, the amazing retro-silent movie The Artist (2011), Michael Keeton's attempt at one continuous shot in Birdman (2014), or the biographical Hitchcock (2012).
Even so, this movie doesn't project a captivating tone or compelling or riveting performance. It is not an action thriller nor even a real period drama. It actually has more of a cut and paste tonality to it devoid of real urgency or emotional appeal, except for the last forth of the movie which turns somewhat a strange and less dramatic version of World War II dramatic thriller in The Great Escape (1963) even down to a supposedly funny but serio-reaction to a simple phone call ring and the resulting odd attempt at comic relief. It's almost as if the Spanish director forgot how to or couldn't replicate his use of comedy-drama that he managed in eighteen years earlier in The Girl of Your Dreams (1998) also about a movie production from Spain but this time they ended up shooting in Germany. Instead the ending seems to be a sort of clumsy old Wooden Allen mish-mash of cobbled together added final story plot along with a somewhat awkward, confusing but dramatic and touching flourish.
Cary Elwes as an actor Gary Jones portraying the King is over the top with his performance and his odd choice of a deep guttural voice. His presence as an extended cameo actually seems too distracting and so prominent as to off-balance all the rest of what's going on the movie while he's in a scene. Interestingly, it's possible that either Elwes was miscast in this movie or the character of Gary Jones was miscast in the movie within the movie. It's hard to tell. During the second quarter of the movie, it seems to drag off at times onto tangential and more boring scenes that don't have anything to do with the main storyline of the movie.
A fourth of the movie begins, unlike what the trailers suggest, is more about a former movie wonk, Blas, than the dynamic comedy-drama performance of Penelope Cruz. Which actually results in this moving seemingly having two parallel storyline occurring in one movie by the time Cruz manages to take command of her scenes. Resines' scenes are plodding and slow and uninspired. As for Penelope Cruz along with Mandy Pantinkin, they seem to be the only characters who can energize and bring a sparkle of interesting entertainment to the screen in the movie. Cruz has a lively, delicious presence on the screen. Her on-screen presence and her ability to diversify or reveal different characters is vivacious and electric as well as tender and heart-rending. Yet the cavalier attitude towards sexual conquests and affairs seems to find some contradiction in the apparent common acceptance in the movie which may be at odds with perhaps an American audience. Not that such sexual proclivity can't be filmed in a provocative and appealing way as Shirley MacLaine achieved in her Golden Globe nominated performance in Woman Times Seven (1967) about infidelity in France.
There's a wonderful singing scene being filmed midway through the movie that seems to capture a cinematographic ambiance that could have been the core of this movie, like other amazing character-driven movies about the film industry such as Saving Mr. Banks (2013) about the Mary Popping's story, the amazing retro-silent movie The Artist (2011), Michael Keeton's attempt at one continuous shot in Birdman (2014), or the biographical Hitchcock (2012).
Even so, this movie doesn't project a captivating tone or compelling or riveting performance. It is not an action thriller nor even a real period drama. It actually has more of a cut and paste tonality to it devoid of real urgency or emotional appeal, except for the last forth of the movie which turns somewhat a strange and less dramatic version of World War II dramatic thriller in The Great Escape (1963) even down to a supposedly funny but serio-reaction to a simple phone call ring and the resulting odd attempt at comic relief. It's almost as if the Spanish director forgot how to or couldn't replicate his use of comedy-drama that he managed in eighteen years earlier in The Girl of Your Dreams (1998) also about a movie production from Spain but this time they ended up shooting in Germany. Instead the ending seems to be a sort of clumsy old Wooden Allen mish-mash of cobbled together added final story plot along with a somewhat awkward, confusing but dramatic and touching flourish.
Writer/Director Fernando Trueba (Belle Epoque, The Girl of Your Dreams, The Artist and the Model) revives the storyline and characters of The Girl of Your Dreams and places the tale (and stars from the original) in a slovenly montage of Span in the time of Franco. It desperately needs an editor.
Briefly the story relates Penélope Cruz, as the famous movie star Macarena Granada, who flees the glitz and glamour of 1950s Hollywood to return to her roots in Spain where she has signed on to star in an epic film as Queen Isabella of Spain. Some would say it is enough simply to see Penélope Cruz on screen (she remains extraordinarily beautiful), but the story is so overwritten with meaningless side plots that make the very very long film become quite boring.
There are some fine actors involved – Mandy Patikin, Clive Revill, Antonio Resines, Ana Belén, Rosa Maria Sardà, Jorge Sanz, Javier Cámara, and an embarrassingly tedious role for Cary Elwes, but the bluster takes over and even the scenery takes second place to the paucity of significant story. Pass.
Briefly the story relates Penélope Cruz, as the famous movie star Macarena Granada, who flees the glitz and glamour of 1950s Hollywood to return to her roots in Spain where she has signed on to star in an epic film as Queen Isabella of Spain. Some would say it is enough simply to see Penélope Cruz on screen (she remains extraordinarily beautiful), but the story is so overwritten with meaningless side plots that make the very very long film become quite boring.
There are some fine actors involved – Mandy Patikin, Clive Revill, Antonio Resines, Ana Belén, Rosa Maria Sardà, Jorge Sanz, Javier Cámara, and an embarrassingly tedious role for Cary Elwes, but the bluster takes over and even the scenery takes second place to the paucity of significant story. Pass.
A film nice to see for actors. It is the basic conclusion . An American historical movie with a Spanish subject under Franco regime , mixing humor, fine irony and proposing,in essence, one of French war comedies, Penelope Cruz in her beauty, a chaotic story about the American film star returns in home country and the director punished by circumstances. The real good point - Carlos Areces as Franco. Short , a nice film, great for energy, less for quasi - improvised story.
- Kirpianuscus
- Jul 24, 2020
- Permalink
It's the 1950s, and Arturo Ripstein is producing a movie in Spain with a mix of Hollywood and local talent. Spanish-born but now American flm star Penelope Cruz is the cast's lead. Except on the set, where director Clive Revill (playing a thinly disguised John Ford) doze in an alcoholic stupor, all is chaos, filled with gossip, affairs, and an attempted rescue of one of Miss Cruz' lovers from a political prison.
It's a sort of sequel to 1998's The Girl of Your Dreams, and it's very funny, a movie that looks like Kenneth Anger's fever dreams, and in which the actors think they can do things in reality as they do in the movies, so of course the cast includes Mandy Patinkin among the American cohort.
It's a sort of sequel to 1998's The Girl of Your Dreams, and it's very funny, a movie that looks like Kenneth Anger's fever dreams, and in which the actors think they can do things in reality as they do in the movies, so of course the cast includes Mandy Patinkin among the American cohort.
I was looking forward to seeing The Queen of Spain. I loved the first film and this was very promising, with the same cast and most of the crew. Five minutes after it started, I just wanted to leave the theatre. The main problem is, I believe, the script, which is just very, very poor. The Girl of Your Dreams was pure bliss, and here they try to use the same structure and some of the gags are very similar, but it just does not work. The acting is also quite bad, which is surprising, for the actors are all very good. I did like the settings, even though they could have made more of them. They try to show the bleak Spain of the Franco regime, but this idea is not explored in depth. An unfortunate film.
- KeithBolton92
- Nov 29, 2016
- Permalink
A second rate flick, made unpalatable by Trueba's childish political obsessions. Not that he is unique in such proclivities. Other countries have film industries, Spain "enjoys" an obscenely subsidized version of the Socorro Rojo.
- menoscuento
- May 31, 2019
- Permalink
The expression "dispensable", or "waste of time" when something you do not like, and when the thing gets to much, "disaster." But the "agony" is not usual in your articles, and less a criticism in that you really saw it horrible watching this movie and that you did not leave the screening room because you wanted to be responsible with your obligation to make the criticism Did you write immediately after seeing it? Because reading the review, you have pitied me!.
And more striking is the way you expressed yourself after reading the interview they did to Trueba in El Mundo, with the petite who launched "The only thing I can say is that what they have attacked, they should think they are doing a Harm to their country, and then they should think that they pass and the cinema does not. " Curious after the "I have never felt Spanish, nor five minutes of my life".
I think Trueba already knows what he's done and he's putting on the patch before the wound. And I think that you will not be the only one who is going to criticize this film hard, which for what I am reading, does not have much to defend.
(Sorry for my English)
And more striking is the way you expressed yourself after reading the interview they did to Trueba in El Mundo, with the petite who launched "The only thing I can say is that what they have attacked, they should think they are doing a Harm to their country, and then they should think that they pass and the cinema does not. " Curious after the "I have never felt Spanish, nor five minutes of my life".
I think Trueba already knows what he's done and he's putting on the patch before the wound. And I think that you will not be the only one who is going to criticize this film hard, which for what I am reading, does not have much to defend.
(Sorry for my English)
- acagencat-63672
- Nov 29, 2016
- Permalink
I loved it! Saw some reviews and thought I wouldn't watch it, but my wife and I decided to give it a try. Wow, glad we did, we enjoyed it to the end.
To those who "didn't get it" all I have to say is, travel abroad, but learn some of those other countries cultures before criticizing their films. Apparently there is a lack of external cultural understanding in the USA, so before you criticize a movie without understanding other countries customs you may want to think twice or more before posting a review.
The movie is mostly subtitled and there's a lot lost in translation, mainly, customs, idioms, traditions, etc., that would clarify much of what non-Spanish speakers did not understand. We're from Central America, and Spanish culture is different from ours, but the advantage of speaking Spanish, and having grown up watching movies from Spain helped us enjoy this film greatly. Maybe I should have rated it a 9, but for those non-Spanish speakers I left it as 8, for their sake.
To those who "didn't get it" all I have to say is, travel abroad, but learn some of those other countries cultures before criticizing their films. Apparently there is a lack of external cultural understanding in the USA, so before you criticize a movie without understanding other countries customs you may want to think twice or more before posting a review.
The movie is mostly subtitled and there's a lot lost in translation, mainly, customs, idioms, traditions, etc., that would clarify much of what non-Spanish speakers did not understand. We're from Central America, and Spanish culture is different from ours, but the advantage of speaking Spanish, and having grown up watching movies from Spain helped us enjoy this film greatly. Maybe I should have rated it a 9, but for those non-Spanish speakers I left it as 8, for their sake.
- Catracho0227
- Jan 10, 2022
- Permalink
This film about cinema and Spanish politics is like being served a badly made dish of tapas. It promises a lot of treats, instead it is not funny, nor are the characters interesting. And Ms Cruz is wearing too much make up.
- shanamaria
- Jul 21, 2018
- Permalink
I watched "The Queen of Spain" before "The Girl of Your Dreams" which was a mistake as it is a sort of sequel or remake of that prior film. So I would recommend watching "The Girl of Your Dreams" first if possible, I know it can be hard to find though. I liked the first film well enough but this sequel, "The Queen of Spain" I was not a big fan of. It seemed somewhat hollow or superficial, I never connected to the characters, perhaps I didn't grasp the context well enough as I only know a rudimentary amount of Spanish history. It looks good though but the long runtime drags somewhat and I did not care for one scene in the middle in particular which I won't get into here. My ratings: 3/10 for "Queen of Spain" and 8/10 for "Girl of Your Dreams".
- ThomasColquith
- Oct 26, 2021
- Permalink
I don't think the ratings of this film is fair to the movie. I expected a bad bad movie, but that wasn't what I watched. I liked it! I was moved, it made me laugh and I think the way they incorporated the history of Spain was intelligent in the way they put a lot of references in the dialogue between the characters.
Well done :)
- marialveiby
- Mar 5, 2019
- Permalink
Sequel to "La Niña De Tus Ojos", which brings together the entire cast of the previous film, retaking the story of the characters about 20 years after what happened in the previous film, almost the same time that both films have been released between them.
Trueba pays tribute to the Spanish cinema of the 50s, returning to the character of Macarena Granada (played again by a wonderful Penelope Cruz) that after what happened in the previous film becomes a star in Hollywood and returns to Spain to star in a Biopic of Queen Isabella the Catholic ...
But Trueba is not limited to making a history of cinema within the cinema, but rather portrays a cold and gray Spain that at that time seemed to have lost all hope for a better future ... And as with the previous film, Story moves between comedy and drama achieving a perfect balance resulting in a movie as good and as its predecessor ...
Trueba pays tribute to the Spanish cinema of the 50s, returning to the character of Macarena Granada (played again by a wonderful Penelope Cruz) that after what happened in the previous film becomes a star in Hollywood and returns to Spain to star in a Biopic of Queen Isabella the Catholic ...
But Trueba is not limited to making a history of cinema within the cinema, but rather portrays a cold and gray Spain that at that time seemed to have lost all hope for a better future ... And as with the previous film, Story moves between comedy and drama achieving a perfect balance resulting in a movie as good and as its predecessor ...
- athena-no-sainto
- Nov 29, 2016
- Permalink
Loved the movie, much better than the first part (La Niña de tus Ojos). A perfect representation of Spaniards characters and personality, through one of the toughest periods of Spain's history, but adding some humour to support with the story line.
The film produces tears and laughter in equal parts, making you reflect about so many things , past and present (history, politics, human relationships, love, friendship, ambition, fear...). The argument is clean and develops easily, thanks to a group of well-defined characters (enhanced from the first movie).
It's hard to find something that could be improved. Totally recommended.
The film produces tears and laughter in equal parts, making you reflect about so many things , past and present (history, politics, human relationships, love, friendship, ambition, fear...). The argument is clean and develops easily, thanks to a group of well-defined characters (enhanced from the first movie).
It's hard to find something that could be improved. Totally recommended.
- antonio-37425
- Dec 4, 2016
- Permalink
Amusing and very underrated Spanish comedy, mocking on Hollywood golden age, with an interesting political background (mainly Franco dictatorship in Spain but also McCartyism in the United States). Penélope Cruz shines in the leading role. It is a sequel of a 1998 film by Fernando Trueba, The Girl of Your Dreams.
- dobricmarko
- Feb 26, 2021
- Permalink
The unfailingly engaging Queen of Spain is a movie about making movies that never once lets you forget you are watching a movie.
It's a film about a film that is about Queen Isabella, an Icon of Spanish history, framed by the Spanish people's experience of the Franco reign and the US's political film studio system during the mid 1950's that throws most of what you think you know about all of it out the window.
Every aspect of this film is superb: cinematography, framing, script, score, performances, sets, certainly direction....even the blocking kicks butt.
The Queen of Spain is an absolute joy to experience!
It's a perfect film....silly and sad, romantic and horrifying, in Spanish and in English....just watch it!
It's a film about a film that is about Queen Isabella, an Icon of Spanish history, framed by the Spanish people's experience of the Franco reign and the US's political film studio system during the mid 1950's that throws most of what you think you know about all of it out the window.
Every aspect of this film is superb: cinematography, framing, script, score, performances, sets, certainly direction....even the blocking kicks butt.
The Queen of Spain is an absolute joy to experience!
It's a perfect film....silly and sad, romantic and horrifying, in Spanish and in English....just watch it!
- bettinagh-51115
- Sep 4, 2021
- Permalink
I was delighted to watch this film again, available through Prime, but dismayed to read the negative reviews included in the IMDb -but to each their taste. These negative reviews reveal how important it is at times to know something about the historical and political context in which the film is set (recommended is A Companion to Spanish Cinema, chapters 4, 5 and 6 -the text published by Boydell & Brewer, not the critical anthology published by Wiley-Blackwell). With the appropriate knowledge, for instance some of the nationalistic historical epics of the forties, the film scripted by General Franco himself "Raza" , the arrival of USA investment in the fifties, the continued repression of critical political views and many defeated Republicans sent to force labor to build what was to be Franco's mausoleum, "The Queen of Spain" can be enjoyed as brilliant entertaining satire of three decades of Spanish popular cinema wrapped in an outrageous plot.