CARMEN, the second in Carlos Saura's flamenco dance trilogy, which also includes BLOOD WEDDING and EL AMOR BRUJO, is staged as an opera within an opera. To counter what many Spaniards feel are the ineffectual cliches and cultural trappings of CARMEN--the fans and knives and the roses between the teeth--Saura and dancer-.. Read more
| Starring | Antonio Gades, Laura Del Sol, Paco De Lucia, Pepa Flores |
|---|---|
| Director | Carlos Saura |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
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CARMEN, the second in Carlos Saura's flamenco dance trilogy, which also includes BLOOD WEDDING and EL AMOR BRUJO, is staged as an opera within an opera. To counter what many Spaniards feel are the ineffectual cliches and cultural trappings of CARMEN--the fans and knives and the roses between the teeth--Saura and dancer-choreographer Antonio Gades have integrated into the original story a parallel subplot about love, jealousy, and violence in the lives of the dancers performing the ballet. This contemporary love affair between Antonio (Antonio Gades) and Carmen (Laura del Sol) clearly follows the plot of the opera. The entire subplot takes place in rehearsals, and includes a delightful scene of the entire troop spontaneously bursting into a parody of the campy March of the Toreadors.
Saura adds scenes that depict the fantasies of the characters, which is an element that the director uses in many of his films. He blends the emotions of the dancers in their real lives into their dancing in the performance, which brings to life--in a powerful and vivid fashion--the overly familiar characters of Georges Bizet's opera.
| Starring | Antonio Gades, Laura Del Sol, Paco De Lucia, Pepa Flores, Cristina Hoyos, Juan Antonio Jiminez |
|---|---|
| Director | Carlos Saura |
| Studio | MOMENTUM PICTURES |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 37 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
| Language | DVD: Spanish |
| Subtitles | DVD: Dutch, English, Finnish, German, Italian, Norwegian, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 25 Mar 2002 Production year: 1983 |
| Format | DVD |
"...A visual delight....[A] stark artistry of pure dance and mesmerizing mixture of classic music and modern flamenco..."
Saura's Carmen is a Spaniard's examination of the story which did for Spain what the Hovis ads did for Yorkshire. Like... read more on Time Out
I remember first seeing 'Carmen' with 'Blood Wedding' at the old Hampstead Everyman, over twenty years ago. Back then, a younger me found Antonio Gades rather too old to be cast against Laura del Sol: and she,in turn, seemed to substitute sexual allure for dancing ability. In short, I missed the point of the film. Saura has here in fact produced a very fine attempt to outline the irrational nature and destructive force of passion.
Watching it again last week I was struck by Gades' vulnerability, and how he - initially seemingly the more experienced, worldly, partner becomes a slave to Carmen's will.
Stunning performances by the protagonists are balanced by those of the supporting cast and of course the music, singing and dancing are all quite brilliant.
This is 97 minutes of fabulous flamenco dance.Very powerful and full of passion,building up to the super sensual furruca dance.Fantastic floorpounding scenes and of course the naughty Carmen with her lust for men.
Bulls ,guitars,gravelly voiced gypsy singers,its all there.
Go for it, you will join up at the local flamenco classes.