• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Spain
  • Portugal
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Culture
    • IberoArts
      • Books
      • Music
      • Films
  • Iberoblog
    • Videos
  • About Iberosphere
    • Contributors
    • Contact
    • Fine print
      • Privacy Policy
      • Disclaimer
      • Copyright

Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Featured

The apocalypse comes to Barcelona

April 15, 2013 by Olwen Mears Leave a Comment

Los últimos días

The main idea behind Los últimos días, the latest offering from directing/screenwriting brothers David and Àlex Pastor, is far from original. The basic plot - a mysterious and deadly epidemic that creates mass panic and, ultimately, complete social chaos - shares more than a passing likeness with M. Night Shyamalan's 2008 movie The Happening, as well as I am Legend and Danny Boyle's brilliant 2002 release, 28 Days Later. Despite clear parallels with its predecessors, however, Los últimos días is no less worthy in its depiction of all-out human catastrophe. Indeed, it goes one step further, attempting a social critique similar to Blindness, the 2008 movie based on José Saramago's novel of … [Read more...] about The apocalypse comes to Barcelona

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, Spain News Tagged With: Days Later, film, Jos Saramago, Night Shyamalan

Tales for Tapas: Life is a pleasure

April 12, 2013 by Anna Maria O'Donovan Leave a Comment

Sara Montiel.

A woman of international stature passed from the scene this week.  Admired at home and abroad, she touched the lives of millions, a champion of personal freedom who nonetheless came to terms with dictatorship, her instincts were conservative but her choices were often daring – Sara Montiel, the venerable icon of stage and screen, died at her home in Madrid on Monday at the age of 85. Montiel personified – particularly in her later chat-show-celebrity-magazine incarnation – the superficiality of pop culture, yet that very superficiality may have been the key not only to her commercial success but to her importance to Spanish society, particularly in the 1960s. Montiel articulated a kitsch … [Read more...] about Tales for Tapas: Life is a pleasure

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: Bigas Luna, corrida, Malaga FC, Sara Montiel, sex, spain, spain news

Spain’s rugby ambitions foiled in disastrous Six Nations

April 10, 2013 by Joseph Walker Leave a Comment

Spain's rugby team in action.

As this year’s Six Nations proper drew to a close with drama for the British sides, the same cannot be said for Spain and Portugal, who play in the tournament’s second tier. Mustering only a single win between them, the Iberian sides’ performances were sorely disappointing, given that both countries have been aiming to move up a notch in the rugby world, inspired by the example of Italy. And for Spain, a global superpower in so many other sports, this season has been particularly deflating. Played over a two-year cycle (2013-14) alongside the showpiece event, the European Nations Cup Division 1A, to give it its full name, also doubles up as the qualifying rounds of the Rugby World Cup … [Read more...] about Spain’s rugby ambitions foiled in disastrous Six Nations

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Los Leones, Six Nations, spain, spain news, spain rugby, World Cup

La Liga: Deportivo fight back

April 9, 2013 by Halima Ali Leave a Comment

Eric Abidal (right).

Just three weeks ago, with only three liga wins all season to their name, Deportivo de La Coruña were staring down the barrel of relegation. Currently working with their third manager of the season, it’s a far cry from the glory days of a decade ago. League title winners in the 1999–2000 season and runners-up on five occasions, not so long ago the club was regularly finishing in the top half of the table and featuring in European competition. Depor played in the UEFA Champions League five seasons in a row, and reached the semi-finals in 2004 where they were eventually defeated by José Mourinho’s Porto side who would go on to lift the trophy. They have been relegated before, dropping … [Read more...] about La Liga: Deportivo fight back

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: CF, La Coru, Liga, Segunda Divisi

Tales for Tapas: Money and mystique

April 5, 2013 by Anna Maria O'Donovan Leave a Comment

Iñakia Urdangarin and Princess Cristina

The 19th-century British political economist Walter Bagehot noted that letting “daylight in upon the magic” of monarchy risks diminishing its mystique. A court summons, no doubt, represents a mystique-diminishing dose of daylight, and Princess Cristina’s scheduled April 27 appearance before a judge in Majorca may be dignified but is unlikely to be very edifying. Still, the royal families of Europe are not – and never have been – paragons of public virtue (as anyone who has spent time in Las Vegas recently may be able to testify). What makes the Nóos Affair so problematic is not simply that it is a royal scandal but that it is a royal financial scandal in the middle of a national financial … [Read more...] about Tales for Tapas: Money and mystique

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: Mr Rajoy, prime minister, scandal, spain, spain corruption, spain news

Resign? You must be kidding

April 4, 2013 by Guy Hedgecoe 2 Comments

Alberto Núñez Feijóo.

When is it appropriate for a public figure to resign? After displaying gross incompetence? In the wake of evident policy failure? Being caught up in criminal acts? It’s not always clear-cut. Sometimes resignation is an option, but not necessarily the only one. An apology might be just as fitting, or a temporary withdrawal from front-line exposure to the limelight. But in the last few weeks in Spain, there have been several cases that would seem to offer strong candidates for the sack. The most recent is that of Alberto Núñez Feijóo. On Sunday, El País newspaper published photographs showing that the Partido Popular’s premier of Galicia had been a good friend of Marcial Dorado Baúlde, … [Read more...] about Resign? You must be kidding

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: Anthony Weiner, Bárcenas, El Mundo, El Pa, Louis Vuitton, rajoy, spain, spain corruption, spain economy, spain news, Valencia

La Liga: Despondent Benzema searches for form

April 2, 2013 by Halima Ali 1 Comment

Karim Benzema.

Last week, Karim Benzema was booed by the home crowd as he departed the Stade de France during a World Cup qualifier against Spain. It was not the first time this season he has been heckled by his own fans. Whilst the same has not yet occurred at the Santiago Bernabéu, the Frenchman is struggling to score, with every passing week and every goalless game sending his confidence plummeting. Brought in to the club by President Florentino Pérez, who flew to Lyon to personally secure his signing in 2009, Benzema’s trajectory at Real Madrid has been up and down to say the least, going from a cat to a lion and perhaps now back to the cat again. It was coach José Mourinho who, in his first … [Read more...] about La Liga: Despondent Benzema searches for form

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Benzema, CF, Karim Benzema, la liga, Liga, Los Merengues, Real Madrid, Spain football, spain soccer

Farewell to ETA’s destroyer of peace

April 1, 2013 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Xabier López Peña, alias Thierry.

When Xabier López Peña was arrested in Bordeaux in 2008 on terrorism-related offences, he hardly looked like an archetypal leader of ETA. Portly, middle-aged and bespectacled, he didn’t even have the carefully sculptured mullet that so many Basque separatists insist on sporting. But as he was bundled away by French police, his wild shouts and screams at TV cameras hinted at the true nature of the man. López Peña, who died of a brain haemorrhage on Saturday, was held responsible by many for the collapse of the 2006 peace process that offered the hope of a lasting solution to the Basque conflict. As a result, many Basque separatists, as well as the mainstream politicians in Madrid, came … [Read more...] about Farewell to ETA’s destroyer of peace

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: Basque, Basque country, ETA, peace process, spain, spain news

Tales for Tapas: Management lessons

March 31, 2013 by Anna Maria O'Donovan 2 Comments

Mariano Rajoy.

There had been gloomy predictions that Spain’s global soccer ascendancy might be coming to an end, but Tuesday evening’s victory over France was solid if not stellar. Coach Vicente Del Bosque, in characteristically imperturbable fashion, said the win “helps support the conviction we have in our ideas.” Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy would no doubt love to bask in the same warm glow of vindication, but this week’s economic data suggest he has as much chance of doing that as Scotland have of going to Rio de Janeiro next summer. Perhaps the most surprising (and dispiriting) thing about the latest batch of figures is that they are no longer very surprising. There was more resignation than … [Read more...] about Tales for Tapas: Management lessons

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: football, Lion King, spain, tax

Lisbon’s multimedia maestro Eduardo Nery

March 21, 2013 by C.S. Ogden Leave a Comment

Eduardo Nery

With its long history of azulejaria, or tilework, and decorative calçada, it could be argued that Lisbon’s soul is illustrated along its walls and cobblestones. One of its best known illustrators was multimedia artist Eduardo Nery, who died in Lisbon on March 2, aged 74. With a writer mother and engineer father, Nery was born in Figueira da Foz and grew up in Lisbon. He attended the Escola Superior de Belas Artes de Lisboa, majoring in painting and also studying architecture and museum conservation. He worked with French tapestry artist Jean Lurçat at Saint-Céré during the 1960s and Nery’s diverse education is reflected in a career that combined photography, painting, glasswork, … [Read more...] about Lisbon’s multimedia maestro Eduardo Nery

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Portugal News Tagged With: art, Eduardo Nery, Lisbon, portugal

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 29
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

The End

Iberosphere calls it a day after three-and-a-half years

Recent Comments

  • Tim on What I learned in a Spanish brothel
  • tom scott on Sex and the Spanish single lady
  • tom scott on What I learned in a Spanish brothel
  • Matt on Sex and the Spanish single lady
  • betty on Madrid, capital of the special advertising section

Recent Posts

  • The End
  • Maybe Rajoy is right: deny everything and it’ll go away
  • A slow death in the afternoon
  • Tales for Tapas: Leaving Spain
  • Spain ahead of the US in bankers’ prosecution

Copyright © 2025 · Iberosphere · Log in