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Carlos Saura

 
Director: Carlos Saura
  • Born: Jan 04, 1932 in Huesca, Aragon, Spain
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '60s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Ay, Carmela!, Carmen, Elisa, Vida Mia
  • First Major Screen Credit: Los Golfos (1960)

Biography

Ranked among Europe's elite filmmakers, Carlos Saura had his greatest impact in the late '60s and early '70s when his often politically charged films revitalized Spanish cinema. Like his mentor Luis Buñuel, Saura freely blends reality with the macabre and an often grotesque surrealism to create worlds in which reality is subjective. Saura's most powerful films came during the last years of Franco's regime; while he still made important films after the dictator's death in 1975, many critics regard them as lacking the potency and lasting appeal of the earlier works.

Saura was born the second of four children in Huesca, Spain. His father was a lawyer, his mother a pianist, and his brother, Antonio, grew up to become a noted abstract expressionist painter. In 1935, Saura's family weathered the Spanish Civil War in Madrid. The war had a tremendous impact on Saura, and snippets of his vivid, often terrifying memories would later appear in his films. As a young man, Saura briefly studied engineering but at age 18 left school to become a professional freelance photographer. Specializing in photographing dancers and musicians, Saura made a name for himself and even staged two one-man exhibitions, the second of which featured abstract photos inspired by Saura's brother, Antonio, who later suggested Saura study motion pictures.

While attending Madrid's Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencas Cinematográficas (now known as the Escuela Oficial de Cinematografía), Saura and his peers were greatly influenced by Italian Neorealism, as evidenced by Saura's graduation short, La Tarde del Domingo/Sunday Afternoon (1957). Saura became a professor and taught film direction at the Escuela Oficial until 1963. In 1958, Saura released his color documentary Cuenca, followed by his debut fictional feature Las Golfos, which, though completed in 1959, was censored until the early '60s. The story of street hoodlums striving to escape their poverty by becoming bullfighters, it utilized a non-professional cast and was the first Spanish film shot entirely on location. Three years later, Saura made his second feature, Llanto por un Bandido/Lament for a Bandit (1964), a Spanish-French co-production about a famous Andalusian bandit. Though Saura wanted it to be a realistic account of the robber's life, the producers insisted on making it a swashbuckling epic. The resulting compromise was not only censored, it was a box-office failure and led Saura to eschew creative input from external sources on future projects.

Recognizing Saura's talent and vision, producer Elías Querejeta respected the director's need for absolute creative control and produced many of Saura's subsequent films, beginning with La Caza/The Hunt (1965), a powerful psychological thriller which commented on the societal effects of Franco's ideology. By the mid-'60s, Saura started organizing his longtime production team, including cinematographer Luis Caudrado, film editor Pablo G. del Amo, and American actress Geraldine Chaplin, with whom he would have a long-term personal relationship and a child. La Caza earned high praise at several prominent international film festivals, including the Berlin Film Festival where it received the prestigious Silver Bear award. Saura won another Silver Bear in 1968 with Peppermint Frappé, a dark exploration of how church-and state-enforced societal, sexual, and psychological repression can lead good people to monstrous deeds. While Saura's criticism of Franco was initially fairly subtle, his views became more obvious with time, but the more censors trimmed Saura's work, the more outspoken he became. The Spanish government was more tolerant of Saura than they might otherwise have been (he was never banned from filmmaking) because his films earned Spanish cinema so much international acclaim at festivals. However, on one occasion, the Ministry of Information released a particularly inflammatory Saura film, El Jardín de las Delicias/The Garden of Delights (1970), which castigated the government, the church, and the sexually repressed Spanish society, because they considered it too boring to pose a threat. The ministers' opinions notwithstanding, the story of a governess who is assaulted by three brothers (each representing the aforementioned problems) had particular impact for non-Spanish audiences.

Franco died in 1975, and with the fall of his regime came a new freedom in expression. Still, Saura remained haunted by his childhood experiences and the dark aspects of Spain's 20th century history. From this point, his films have alternated between those which focus upon sociopolitical issues and less polemic "art house" films. Saura gained particular notice in the 1980s for his "flamenco trilogy" made in conjunction with noted dancer and choreographer Antonio Gades: Boda de Sangre/Blood Wedding (1981), an adaptation of Carmen (1983), and El Amor Brujo/A Love Bewitched (1986). In 1995, Saura would again return to the world of Spain's national dance with his compelling documentary Flamenco. Three years later, Saura would explore Argentina's national dance with his docudrama Tango (1998). Billed as Argentina's most expensive film and filmed utilizing specially designed equipment, Tango harkens back to Saura's earlier works with its subtle emphasis on the dark historical and political implications of the dancers' complex, passionate movements. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Carlos Saura
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Carlos Saura (born 4 January 1932, Atarés, Huesca) is a Spanish film director.

Contents

Early life

Born into a family of artists (his mother was a pianist and his brother, Antonio Saura, a painter), he developed his artistic sense in childhood by doing photography. He obtained his directing diploma in Madrid in 1957 at the Institute of Cinema Research and Studies, where he also taught until 1963.

Career

In 1957-1958, he created his first film (Cuenca). In 1956, his style, both lyrical and documentary, centred on the problems of the poor, received the recognition of the international community at the Berlin Film Festival, where he received the Silver Bear for his film La caza. In 1967, his film Peppermint Frappé also received a prize at Berlin.

The movies La prima Angélica (Cousin Angélica) of 1973 and Cría cuervos (Raising Ravens [from the Spanish phrase: cria cuervos y te sacaran los ojos (raise ravens and they will peck out your eyes)]) of 1975 received the special prize of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival. His movie "Mama cumple 100 años" (Mom is celebrating her 100 years) was nominated at the Oscars, for the best foreign film in 1979.

Saura has become known for making movies centered around traditional Latin dance. His "Flamenco Trilogy" of the 1980s includes Bodas de Sangre, Carmen, and El amor brujo, and he later made movies called Flamenco, Tango and Fados.

In 1990, he received the Goya Award for the best director and best script for ¡Ay, Carmela!. He was chosen as director for the official film of the 1992 Olympic Games of Barcelona, "Marathon" (1993).

In 2008, Carlos Saura was honoured with Global Life Time Achievement Award at the 10 Mumbai International Film Festival organized by the Mumbai Academy of the Moving Image (MAMI)[1]

Personal life

Carlos Saura was married twice, in Barcelona in 1957 to Adela Medrano, and on December 27, 1982 to Mercedes Pérez. By his first marriage he had two sons, Carlos (b. 1958) and Antonio (b. 1960). By his second marriage he had three sons, Manuel (b. 1980), Adrián (b. 1984) and Diego (b. 1987). Between marriages he had at least one known son, Shane (b. 1974) by actress Geraldine Chaplin, though his at times cavalier attitude towards sex leads some to believe there may have been more. After his second marriage he was the father of a daughter named Ana (b. December 1994) by Eulalia Ramón.

Saura considers that his film on surrealist master Luis Buñuel is his best cinematic work. In an interview to an online film magazine, DearCinema.com[2]he says about “Buñuel y la mesa del rey Salomón (Buñuel and the table of king Solomon -2001)” “That’s the greatest film I’ve ever made. I like the film but nobody else seems to like it. I’m sure Buñuel would have loved this film. But perhaps only he would have loved it. Everything you see in the film is actually based on conversations I had with him.”

Filmography

External links


 
 
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