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Synopsis

Grandeur nature closed a three-film cycle in which Berlanga and Azcona showed how defenseless men are against the overpower- ing force of women (the two other films are La boutique, shot in Argentina, and Long Live the Bride and Groom!) With a very poor reception in its time –especially from feminist groups– it was later regarded as one of the duet’s best films. Shot in France during the death rattles of Franco’s regime (it would open in Spain five years later, but by then many had already seen it in the bordering town of Perpignan, a habit at the time) the film chronicles the love story between Michel, a dentist with a marriage in crisis, and the inflatable doll he orders from Japan. Yes, a “love” story, and with a few condiments: lots of sex, of course, but also jealousy, and even an infidelity (by her!) that will drive Michel into a profound desperation. Liberating all the fetish eroticism repressed on the other side of the Pyrenees, Berlanga manufactured yet another fable about loneliness and lack of communication, even bitterer and darker than his previous ones. –Mar del Plata Film Festival

Director

Original

Luis García Berlanga

Berlanga commenced his studies in Valencia in1928, although in 1929 his family sent him and his brother Fernando (due to a lung disease) to the Beau-soleil hospital school in Switzerland. In 1930, he returned to the San José School in Valencia where he stayed until 1931, the year in which the Jesuits were expelled from Spain. In 1936, while he was studying at the Academia Cabanilles, the Spanish Civil War began, and he saw active service in the riflemen’s 40th Division. After the war Franco’s dictatorship imprisoned his father, then a member of the Spanish Parliament for the ‘Frente Popular’ (Popular Front). In an attempt to improve his father’s situation in jail, he joined the División Azul (Blue Division) in 1941, and fought in Russia at the Novgorod front, returning to Spain in 1942.

Towards 1943 he began to take an interest in poetry and cinema, and started to write a screenplay entitled ‘Cajón de perro’, together with his first cinematographic reviews. In 1947 he entered… read more

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