El (no) biopic ya apunta a los premios Goya. © BTeamPictures
Ya se ha publicado el primer tráiler de “Segundo Premio”, la película dirigida por Isaki Lacuesta (doble ganador de la Concha de Oro del Festival de San Sebastián por “Los Pasos Dobles” y “Entre dos Aguas”) y codirigida por Pol Rodríguez. Una película que tuvo su estreno mundial en el Festival de Málaga y que se ha llevado tres premios: mejor película, mejor dirección y mejor montaje.
La película está protagonizada por Daniel Ibáñez, Cristalino, Stéphanie Magnin, Mafo, Chesco Ruiz y Edu Rejón y se ambienta en la Granada de finales de los 90. En plena efervescencia artística y cultural, un grupo de música indie atraviesa su momento más delicado: la bajista rompe con la banda buscando su sitio fuera de la música y el guitarrista se ve inmerso en una peligrosa espiral de autodestrucción. Mientras, el cantante se enfrenta a...
Ya se ha publicado el primer tráiler de “Segundo Premio”, la película dirigida por Isaki Lacuesta (doble ganador de la Concha de Oro del Festival de San Sebastián por “Los Pasos Dobles” y “Entre dos Aguas”) y codirigida por Pol Rodríguez. Una película que tuvo su estreno mundial en el Festival de Málaga y que se ha llevado tres premios: mejor película, mejor dirección y mejor montaje.
La película está protagonizada por Daniel Ibáñez, Cristalino, Stéphanie Magnin, Mafo, Chesco Ruiz y Edu Rejón y se ambienta en la Granada de finales de los 90. En plena efervescencia artística y cultural, un grupo de música indie atraviesa su momento más delicado: la bajista rompe con la banda buscando su sitio fuera de la música y el guitarrista se ve inmerso en una peligrosa espiral de autodestrucción. Mientras, el cantante se enfrenta a...
- 5/2/2024
- by Marta Medina
- mundoCine
Conoce la fecha de estreno y todos los detalles de la película que ganó no uno, sino tres premios en el Festival de Málaga. © BTeamPictures
Ya se conoce cuándo llegará a los cines “Segundo Premio”, la película dirigida por Isaki Lacuesta (doble ganador de la Concha de Oro del Festival de San Sebastián por “Los Pasos Dobles” y “Entre dos Aguas”) y codirigida por Pol Rodríguez. Una película que tuvo su estreno mundial en el Festival de Málaga y que se ha llevado tres premios: mejor película, mejor dirección y mejor montaje. Y, ojo, que ya apunta a los premios Goya.
La película está protagonizada por Daniel Ibáñez, Cristalino, Stéphanie Magnin, Mafo, Chesco Ruiz y Edu Rejón y se ambienta en la Granada de finales de los 90. En plena efervescencia artística y cultural, un grupo de música indie atraviesa su momento más delicado: la bajista rompe con la banda buscando...
Ya se conoce cuándo llegará a los cines “Segundo Premio”, la película dirigida por Isaki Lacuesta (doble ganador de la Concha de Oro del Festival de San Sebastián por “Los Pasos Dobles” y “Entre dos Aguas”) y codirigida por Pol Rodríguez. Una película que tuvo su estreno mundial en el Festival de Málaga y que se ha llevado tres premios: mejor película, mejor dirección y mejor montaje. Y, ojo, que ya apunta a los premios Goya.
La película está protagonizada por Daniel Ibáñez, Cristalino, Stéphanie Magnin, Mafo, Chesco Ruiz y Edu Rejón y se ambienta en la Granada de finales de los 90. En plena efervescencia artística y cultural, un grupo de música indie atraviesa su momento más delicado: la bajista rompe con la banda buscando...
- 3/20/2024
- by Marta Medina
- mundoCine
Isaki Lacuesta has returned to the Malaga Film Festival with his highly anticipated rock band drama “Saturn Return” (“Segundo Premio”), a fabled account of iconic Spanish group Los Planetas and their struggle to make their legendary third album,“Una semana en un motor de un autobús.”
The film, which the award-winning filmmaker directed with Pol Rodríguez and wrote with Fernando Navarro, stars Daniel Ibáñez, Stéphanie Magnin and musician-turned-actor Cristalino.
“Saturn Returns” screened in competition in Malaga, where Lacuesta and Isa Campo, double San Sebastian Golden Shell winners, won the best director Silver Biznaga for their 2016 mystery drama “The Next Skin.”
Speaking to Variety, Lacuesta explains how the film is not about Los Planetas but rather about the legend of the band and the mystique they themselves have cultivated over the years. Indeed, the story of “Saturn Return” is largely based on the band’s songs.
“It is not a journalistic documentary,...
The film, which the award-winning filmmaker directed with Pol Rodríguez and wrote with Fernando Navarro, stars Daniel Ibáñez, Stéphanie Magnin and musician-turned-actor Cristalino.
“Saturn Returns” screened in competition in Malaga, where Lacuesta and Isa Campo, double San Sebastian Golden Shell winners, won the best director Silver Biznaga for their 2016 mystery drama “The Next Skin.”
Speaking to Variety, Lacuesta explains how the film is not about Los Planetas but rather about the legend of the band and the mystique they themselves have cultivated over the years. Indeed, the story of “Saturn Return” is largely based on the band’s songs.
“It is not a journalistic documentary,...
- 3/8/2024
- by Ed Meza
- Variety Film + TV
Madrid-based Latido Films has snagged international sales rights to Isaki Lacuesta’s “Saturn Return” (“Segundo premio”) and plans to kick off pre-sales at the Cannes market.
Currently shooting in Granada, the musical drama is set during the ‘90s when the Andalusian city was ground zero for an outburst of cultural effervescence, with the pioneering rock band Los Planetas at the center of it. The film focuses on the creative process behind the recording of their iconic third album, which also took them to New York.
Latido likens “Saturn Return” to “24 Hour Party People,” the 2002 British biographical dramedy about Manchester’s influential music scene, which spawned such bands as Factory Records’ Joy Division, New Order and Happy Mondays.
Based on a script by Fernando Navarro, the writer behind one of Netflix’s most viewed Spanish-language movies, “Below Zero,” the story is set at a time when the group was at its most fraught-ridden moments,...
Currently shooting in Granada, the musical drama is set during the ‘90s when the Andalusian city was ground zero for an outburst of cultural effervescence, with the pioneering rock band Los Planetas at the center of it. The film focuses on the creative process behind the recording of their iconic third album, which also took them to New York.
Latido likens “Saturn Return” to “24 Hour Party People,” the 2002 British biographical dramedy about Manchester’s influential music scene, which spawned such bands as Factory Records’ Joy Division, New Order and Happy Mondays.
Based on a script by Fernando Navarro, the writer behind one of Netflix’s most viewed Spanish-language movies, “Below Zero,” the story is set at a time when the group was at its most fraught-ridden moments,...
- 5/9/2023
- by Anna Marie de la Fuente
- Variety Film + TV
Featured in the Spanish showcase at Series Mania, “Age of Anger” (“La edad de la ira”) has the potential to grab viewers from all demographics as it tackles the fractured and complex inner workings of teenagers coming to terms with their complexities, amidst the investigation of a close-to-home homicide.
Produced and distributed internationally via Atresmedia TV and The Mediapro Studio, the series follows its protagonists as they negotiate the terms of their budding and unconditional relationship, one that treads the line between steadfast friendship and romance. Palpable rapport is felt between the characters as they traverse the classroom, where they’re provoked to unravel moral quandaries by a passionate professor and an extracurricular film studies group.
Shaped by lauded playwright and series writer Lucía Carballal (“Locked Up”), the characters boast immense depth as audiences are privy to their vulnerabilities, naivety, and maturity. Dealing with traumas larger than themselves, they unveil nuanced takes on age-old tropes,...
Produced and distributed internationally via Atresmedia TV and The Mediapro Studio, the series follows its protagonists as they negotiate the terms of their budding and unconditional relationship, one that treads the line between steadfast friendship and romance. Palpable rapport is felt between the characters as they traverse the classroom, where they’re provoked to unravel moral quandaries by a passionate professor and an extracurricular film studies group.
Shaped by lauded playwright and series writer Lucía Carballal (“Locked Up”), the characters boast immense depth as audiences are privy to their vulnerabilities, naivety, and maturity. Dealing with traumas larger than themselves, they unveil nuanced takes on age-old tropes,...
- 3/25/2022
- by Holly Jones
- Variety Film + TV
Spain’s Atresplayer Premium unveiled a slate of new and returning programs on Monday evening in a live presentation streamed from Madrid’s famed Gran Via, hosted by the streamer and featuring some of the most recognizable faces behind its impressive lineup of original local programming.
2021 was a banner year for Atresplayer, which closed agreements with major broadcasting and streaming partners including Movistar, Vodafone, Google and Apple. Due to its global reach, the service has also become a lifeline to Spaniards living abroad, with hundreds of thousands of subscribers worldwide who tune in to keep up on Spanish news and culture.
Below, highlights from the first Atresplayer Premium Day:
“Vestidas de azul” A continuation of the service’s award-winning global hit series “Veneno,” picked as one of Variety’s best international series in 2020 which sold to HBO Max in the U.S. Series creators Javier Calvo and Javier Ambrossi are back to produce,...
2021 was a banner year for Atresplayer, which closed agreements with major broadcasting and streaming partners including Movistar, Vodafone, Google and Apple. Due to its global reach, the service has also become a lifeline to Spaniards living abroad, with hundreds of thousands of subscribers worldwide who tune in to keep up on Spanish news and culture.
Below, highlights from the first Atresplayer Premium Day:
“Vestidas de azul” A continuation of the service’s award-winning global hit series “Veneno,” picked as one of Variety’s best international series in 2020 which sold to HBO Max in the U.S. Series creators Javier Calvo and Javier Ambrossi are back to produce,...
- 12/14/2021
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
BAFTA has revealed the nominations for its annual Children’s Awards. Cbbc and Netflix series The Worst Witch leads the way with four nominations, including director, drama and young performer for Bella Ramsey, her second consecutive nomination after being given a nod for the same show last year. Horrible Histories: The Movie – Rotten Romans, the Altitude Films production backed by BBC Films and Amazon, picked up there noms including for feature film, where it will compete alongside Mary Poppins Returns, Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse and Toy Story 4. Also with three nods are the Horrible Histories TV series and animation show The Amazing World Of Gumball. The BAFTA Children’s Awards ceremony takes place in London on December 1.
Koldo Serra, whose credits include the latest season of Netflix’s Money Heist, is set to direct Spanish-language horror show Caminantes, the first drama series made by Orange in Spain. Produced by 100 Balas,...
Koldo Serra, whose credits include the latest season of Netflix’s Money Heist, is set to direct Spanish-language horror show Caminantes, the first drama series made by Orange in Spain. Produced by 100 Balas,...
- 10/22/2019
- by Tom Grater
- Deadline Film + TV
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