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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Nick Lyne

‘The Skin I Live In’: another Almodóvar masterpiece?

September 8, 2011 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

The international press has been fulsome in its praise of Pedro Almodóvar’s latest movie, The Skin I Live In (La piel que habito), with some reviewers hailing it as a masterpiece, the work of a maestro confidently taking risks, pushing the boundaries of cinema while at the same time entertaining us. With the exception of El País’s Carlos Boyero — whose loathing for Almodóvar is long-standing — the Spanish press has been equally gushing, using that peculiarly empty and baroque language employed when the writer can’t think of anything genuinely meaningful to say, but has to fill the columns: or perhaps in this case it’s simply a way to avoid spoiling the plot. Because that is where the … [Read more...] about ‘The Skin I Live In’: another Almodóvar masterpiece?

Filed Under: Culture, Films, IberoArts Tagged With: Almodóvar, antonio banderas, film, la piel que habito, spain, Spain cinema, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish film, spanish news, the skin I live in, women

Anarchy in the UK, headed Spain’s way soon

August 11, 2011 by Nick Lyne 11 Comments

A number of commentators in the Spanish media have pointed out the differences between Spain’s indignados and the young people involved in the looting in London and other British cities. In doing so most point out the similarities between Spain and Britain: both countries are in the midst of recession, subject to severe public spending cuts, have high youth unemployment rates, and where the mainstream parties are widely regarded as out of touch with, or powerless to do anything about, the situation. “So what do the English do,” asks John Carlin in El País, “they go out and steal flat-screen televisions and trainers… and the Spanish? Well, what the indignados have done,” is to stage … [Read more...] about Anarchy in the UK, headed Spain’s way soon

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: London, looting, spain, spain news, spain politics, spanish politics, UK, UK riots

Mission: Impossible, the Valley of the Fallen

June 20, 2011 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Valle de los Caidos

Here’s a question: is the Valley of the Fallen (Valle de los Caídos) a religious shrine: a Benedictine monastery and Roman Catholic basilica that includes a memorial to the dead in the Spanish Civil War, along with the tomb of General Francisco Franco? Or is it a grotesque monument to hate, an enduring reminder, built by its victims, of a military dictatorship that murdered and imprisoned hundreds of thousands of people whose only crime was to have defended democracy? Coming up with an answer will be the task of a newly appointed 13-member commission. It’s been given five months to decide, once and for all, what to do with the Valley of the Fallen. (What do you think should be … [Read more...] about Mission: Impossible, the Valley of the Fallen

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Catholic Church, franco dictatorship, madrid, Politics, spain, spain history, spain news, spain politics, spanish civil war, spanish history, spanish news, valle de los caidos, valley of the fallen

The Spanish holocaust

June 1, 2011 by Nick Lyne 3 Comments

Even to this day, when asked about the slaughter and repression carried about by General Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War and in the years that followed, the standard reply from many Spaniards is that atrocities were committed on both sides. But in this relentlessly harrowing read, British historian Paul Preston provides, page after page, factual, documentary accounts of the systematic policy introduced by Franco early on in the war to rid the country of the red menace and to install a reign of terror among the few that might still contemplate resistance. This was accomplished through disappearances, and in many cases, the murders of entire families, along with theft of young … [Read more...] about The Spanish holocaust

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured Tagged With: Franco, Paracuellos, paul preston, Rape, Santiago Carrillo, spain, spain history, spain news, spain politics, spanish civil war, Spanish Civil War books, spanish history, Spanish Holocaust, spanish news, The Spanish Holocaust, women

Sábato, Argentina’s contradictory literary giant

May 6, 2011 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Ernesto Sábato, who died on April 30 at the age of 99, was, as Voltaire said of all great men and women, a mass of contradictions. And therein lies the strength of the Argentine’s writing: he always wrote what he understood to be true, according to his often contradictory experiences. He was chosen to head the committee (CONADEP) tasked with investigating the "disappearances" of thousands of people during Argentina’s dictatorship, yet had initially supported the military when it took over in 1976 at a time of mounting economic problems, social turmoil, and clashes with leftist guerrillas who carried out kidnappings and killings. He had joined other writers in a meeting with dictator … [Read more...] about Sábato, Argentina’s contradictory literary giant

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured Tagged With: argentina, CONADEP, ernesto sábato, military, sábato, science, society, spain news, spanish news, Spanish news in English

Garzón appeals to Strasbourg over prosecution for Franco-era probe

April 7, 2011 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

Judge Baltasar Garzón has filed a case to the European Court of Human Rights challenging the lawfulness of his prosecution for opening an investigation into crimes committed during the Franco era. Judge Garzón was suspended from his position in the High Court in May of 2010 pending the outcome of his trial for abuse of power. No date has been set. In 2006, in line with his role as one of six investigating judges at Spain’s High Court, Garzón began a preliminary investigation following requests by the families of victims of repression by the Franco regime to ascertain the legality of a prosecution. His analysis of Spanish law, as well as the body of developed international law in this … [Read more...] about Garzón appeals to Strasbourg over prosecution for Franco-era probe

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Franco, garzón, judge, spain, spain dictatorship, spain human rights, spain news, spanish news, spanish politics, victims

Torrente, saviour of the Spanish film industry

March 31, 2011 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Lethal Crisis (Crisis letal) is Santiago Segura’s fourth Torrente movie; the actor-director says it will be his last: the character is “killing” him, although it’s not clear whether the Spanish comic is referring to the 40 kilos he puts on for the role, or his chances of ever winning an Oscar. Torrente 4 trots out the same smutty jokes and seul entendres as its successors, but is made all the more, well, smutty, for being in 3D (That said, this reviewer was surprised, not to say disappointed, that Segura didn’t use the costly Avatar technology at his disposal to shove the abundant breasts and genitalia liberally on display throughout in the audience’s face). It’s hardly worth … [Read more...] about Torrente, saviour of the Spanish film industry

Filed Under: Culture, Films Tagged With: González Sinde, Lethal Crisis, robert deniro, Sacha Baron Cohen, Santiago Segura, Spain cinema, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish news, Torrente, Torrente 4

Spain still doesn’t understand the separation of Church and State

March 30, 2011 by Nick Lyne 2 Comments

Pedophile priests who will never see the inside of a court, child robbers at large, unpunished crimes from the Franco era, corrupt politicians at all levels and in most parties, a banking system in cahoots with construction companies that has dragged the economy into ruin… Meanwhile a provincial court in Valladolid, seemingly unaware of the Spanish Constitution’s guarantee of freedom of expression nearly four decades after the death of the dictator, has hauled comedian Leo Bassi up before a judge to answer charges of “offending religious feelings, slander, and libel.” The Italian-born actor and comedian, noted, it might be safely said, for his love of political controversy, gave a show at … [Read more...] about Spain still doesn’t understand the separation of Church and State

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Catholic Church, Far Right Groups, Humour, Leo Bassi, spain, the Pope, Valladolid University

The Spaniards who fought for Hitler

March 21, 2011 by Nick Lyne 4 Comments

On June 24, 1941, two days after Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union, General Francisco Franco announced the creation of a Spanish volunteer unit “to fight Bolshevism” that would eventually grow to include some 48,000 troops. The División Azul, or Blue Division, was incorporated into the German Armed Forces as the 250th Division of the 16th Army and fought on the Russian Front. Its name came from the blue shirts worn by the Falange, the political movement that Franco took over, but its soldiers wore German Wehrmacht uniforms. In 1944, with the United States in the war and Soviet troops advancing on Germany, it was disbanded, although some Spanish soldiers fought in the defence of Berlin … [Read more...] about The Spaniards who fought for Hitler

Filed Under: Culture Tagged With: 1941-44, blue division, división azul, División Azul: Russia, Franco and Hitler, guerra civil, Jesús Martínez Tessier, jorge martínez reverte, spain and hitler, spain world war II, spanish civil war

Smoking ban: where’s the sense?

March 1, 2011 by Nick Lyne 2 Comments

But on January 2, the government finally pushed through the EU’s most stringent anti-smoking legislation, ignoring a common sense solution. Aside from the economic impact on bars, and treating us like children, there will be other negative effects. People living in the centre of cities, and particularly those living above bars, will find that when the warm weather comes there will be a lot more noise in the street below them as people gather for a smoke outside bars, and allow their deadly cancerous smoke to drift up to their balconies. Imagine yourself, a non-smoker, sitting next to a terrace table on a hot afternoon or evening, with not so much as a breeze in the air, and four people … [Read more...] about Smoking ban: where’s the sense?

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: cigarette tax, cigarettes, smoking, Spain smoking, Spain smoking ban, spain smoking law, spain tobacco, tobacco, tobacco tax

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