Antonio Gamero Movies

1999  
NR  
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A boy goes on a vacation with his father and ends up taking the ride of his life in the comedy Manolito Gafotas. Manolito (David Sanchez del Rey) is a cheerful but accident-prone child who doesn't see his father very often. Dad is a truck driver usually out on a long haul, leaving Manolito at home with his mother (Adriana Ozores), grandfather (Antonio Gamero), and little brother. Hoping to make up for the time they spend apart, Dad offers to take Manolito along on his next trip and show him the ocean. Manolito eagerly agrees, but gets his father in trouble when he mentions to Mom via telephone that Dad was chatting up a waitress at a roadside diner. After their meal, Manolito hops on board a truck and heads out down the road -- but he doesn't realize he's in the wrong truck until it's too late. Manolito Gafotas was adapted from a comic strip popular in Spain. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
David Sanchez del ReyAdriana Ozores, (more)
1995  
 
This lively western from Spain centers on the exploits of a wealthy young troublemaker who escapes from a Franciscan monastery and teams up with a handsome country boy who has run away from the Army. Together the two try to become outlaws and pose as gang members under the notorious El Argentino, an outlaw who plies his trade upon the border of Portugal and Galicia in northern Spain. The two "bandidos" steal horses and rob a taxman as they flee for the border. Along the way another fellow joins them. Much to their surprise, the fellow turns out to be a female reporter for the New York Times, hoping to interview El Argentino. Unfortunately, the outlaws have never met him. They meet him soon enough when he captures them. Proving to be a vain but basically good-hearted outlaw, he spares them and together they all take off with the Civil Guard hot on their trail. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1987  
 
In this romantic farce, Macarena is a pretty French girl who has come to Cordoba in southern Spain in search of a man she believes may be her father. She finally tracks him and his clan down in a minor city museum: they have become squatters there during one of the museum curator's brief absences. Two policemen have been given the job of persuading the wacky family to vacate the premises. Their response to these blandishments is to threaten to destroy the museum's treasures. At the same time her maybe-father's two sons are putting the make on her, one of the policemen has taken up residence with the family and is dancing with them, as a police SWAT team prepares to storm the building. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Fernando ReyJuan Diego, (more)
1987  
 
This musical comedy stars the popular Spanish group Los Hombres G (The G Men). Lead singer David Summers falls for a college coed before he dumps her for two-timing him. Comedy relief is provided by drummer Javier Molina, often referred to as a Spanish John Belushi. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
David SummersJavier Molina, (more)
1987  
 
Three college friends are reunited after 10 years in this routine drama. Told in a series of flashbacks, Tomas (Massimo Ghini) is a concert pianist who returns to Spain in hopes of looking up his two old friends. He finds one working in a recording studio, while the other has lost the use of his left arm after a series of setbacks that included time in prison and a suicide attempt. Juan Diego and Antonio Banderas co-star with Nina Van Pallandt and Anna Vasoni. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Massimo GhiniJuan Diego, (more)
1986  
 
The spirit, hopes, and failures of a troupe of itinerant performers in the 1950s create a poignant, humorous leitmotif in this drama by Fernando Fernan-Gomez. The story of the wandering players is told in flashbacks, as Carlos Galvan (Jose M. Sacristan) reminisces about the good times while under therapy with a psychiatrist in a senior citizens' home. Carlos and his lover Juanita (Laura del Sol), his teenage son, his father, and a few other actors try to eke out a living by putting on shows in small towns and villages. No one has very much money, but life is lived to the hilt, and Carlos himself has some pretty tall tales. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
José M. SacristánLaura del Sol, (more)
1986  
 
After their wealthy fascist father dies, Ana and her sister Laura have the job of settling his estate. The two sisters have not seen one another for some time and imagine they have nothing in common. Ana stayed at home and married a pretty ordinary middle-class man, Laura moved to Paris and lives a far more glamorous life. Complicating their difficult task is the fact that it is taking place during Holy Week, and all sorts of processions and ceremonies are taking place in the streets around them, and ordinary commercial life is at a standstill. The tension between the two women eases somewhat as they come to grips with their common past and, along with their father, bury some of the myths that have overshadowed both of them. The director of this film, Rafael Azcona, is known for his penchant for mocking conservative Spain's many sacred cows, and he continues that tradition in this occasionally comic drama. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Amparo RivellesAmparo Soler Leal, (more)
1985  
 
La Corte de Faraon is a romp of a zarzuela ("operetta" is a loose translation) that first appeared in 1910 (original libretto by Guillermo Perrin and Miguel de Palacios, original music by Vicente Lleó). The Pharaoh rewards his victorious general Putifar (Josema Yuste) with a new bride, Lota (Ana Belen), but the general is more intrigued with his own ego on his wedding night, and in the morning he dashes off. Along comes Friar José (Antonio Banderas) with his soulful eyes and innocent sexuality, and Lota aggressively goes after him. He escapes, but when brought before the Queen, she follows Lota's precedent and the poor Friar barely escapes a second time with his virtue intact. (In the original the Friar is none other than Joseph of the colored coat.) In this updated version, the troupe of zarzuela players gets in trouble with the police, and the whole lot of them are hauled in for scandalous behavior. Between the on-stage and off-stage insanity, the singing, the dance numbers, the music, the slapstick, and the slams at censors, police, and political repression -- this zarzuela upholds the tradition of pleasing all types of viewers. Except Franco, that is -- he banned the operetta. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ana BelénFernando Fernán Gómez, (more)
1981  
 
A series of vignettes is woven into a larger story in this first film to be written and directed by Juan Minon and Miguel A. Trujillo. A writer who works in a bookshop to earn a living meets a wealthy American named Kargus looking for talent to ensconce in his projected art colony in the Gilbert Islands. In order to convince the American to take him on as a good prospect, the writer promotes his own stories -- the vignettes seen in the film. One story is about a young man trying to impress his girlfriend with his new car, a car he indirectly borrowed from a rental agency. His efforts to hide the rental sign on top of the car lead to various comical posturings. Other vignettes are from the era of the Spanish Civil War, including one about two people trying to survive by hunting cats and killing them to sell to butchers. Another vignette shows pro-Franco activists eradicating anti-Franco graffiti in Madrid. Each vignette stands on its own, without an underlying theme to tie the group together. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Patricia AdrianiFrancisco Algora, (more)
1980  
 
A college student in the late 1950s has a huge crush on movie star Kim Novak in this sentimental drama. Pictures of the actress are hung everywhere in his room at the local boarding house. When he sees a young woman at a party who looks like Novak, the young man is too shy and must overcome his reticence to approach her. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kiti Manver
1979  
 
The Spanish title literally translates as "three in a row," and is an apt description of the romantic relationship between two men and the girl they love. Because they are all friends, they try to find some way of surviving together. When they try their hand at robbery, they have the misfortune of choosing to rob a shop which turns out to belong to one of the boys' aunts. On another occasion, a mugging turns into a beating for the three of them. Such episodes punctuate the comic story of their friendship, up to the point when one of the boys wins the girl's hand in marriage. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Pepe MunneInaki Miramon, (more)
1978  
 
A village girl with ambitions has schemed and connived to get to the big cities in Colombia. Though she is beautiful and finds plenty of romance, nothing quite works out. She even tries prostitution for a while. Eventually, she decides that her discontent has nothing to do with the city and that she's a country girl at heart. She hitches a ride in the empty trailer of a tractor-trailer truck going back to her village. There she finds a dejected American man (Stuart Whitman), whose wife has just died. The two of them converse and get to know one another and even make love. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Stuart WhitmanLaura Gemser, (more)
1978  
 
This allegorical drama is said to depict the state of Spanish society under Franco's dictatorship, and the film won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival in 1978. In the story, nothing can possibly go wrong at the annual dinner of the fishing club. Nothing will go wrong. The members are determined to see it just that way, despite evidence to the contrary. A mob of outsiders just tried to crash the party. The cooks briefly went on strike but were persuaded to serve up the members' catch of trout anyway. The fish is liberally dosed with good-tasting sauces. Despite the awful taste, the fish cannot possibly be rotten -- after all, the loyal members of the club just caught them. Nothing is wrong with the members either, although they appear to be dying. The party will go on, the usual self-congratulatory speeches will be made, and the awards will be given. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Héctor AlterioOfelia Angelica, (more)
1977  
 
This unusual Spanish documentary, compiled in the final years of the Franco regime in Spain, explores the thoughts, attitudes and work of a number of official and semi-official executioners - men who have enforced the death penalty. The film covers the entire era following the Civil War in 1939 up to the time of Franco's death in 1975. The original footage ran to over four hours, but only shorter versions (ranging from two hours to an hour and forty minutes in length) were released. Many of the events shown and described are quite gruesome, and it might best be avoided by the squeamish. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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