Juan Jesus Valverde Movies
A group of men with little left to lose turn to a football pool in a bid to turn their lives around in this drama from Spain. Angel (Jorge Bosch) is a genial loser who, like many of his friends, has fallen on hard times. Angel's pals Paco (Santiago Roamos) and Andres (Manuel Alexandre) barely support themselves by selling snacks outside football stadiums, and Paco will soon have to support a new addition to the family, as his teenage daughter is pregnant. Things are even worse for Juan (Juan Jesus Valverde); out of work and drinking heavily, Juan has learned that his wife Esther (Lola Duenas) has become a prostitute in order to support the family. One of the few bright spots in Angel's life is his uncanny knack for picking the winners at the weekly football matches, though he never bets money on the outcome of the games. Angel is convinced that actually placing a wager would jinx him and he'd be certain to lose, but his friends are convinced otherwise, and Paco hatches a scheme to raise $2,000 to put Angel's talent for prognostication to work. Terca Vida was the first feature film in 15 years from director Fernando Huertas, who made his debut in 1985 with El Elegido. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Santiago Ramos, Manuel Alexandre, (more)
Adapted from the novel by Miguel Delibes, this Spanish film is divided into four sections, one for each season. During the '50s, at an impoverished area in central Spain, young Nini (Alvaro Monje) and his widowed father (Jose Caride) live in a cave on the fringe of a poverty-stricken village. The father ekes out a living by capturing and selling water rats. Writer-director Antonio Gimenez-Rico calls Las Ratas an "allegory of the human condition." ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Alvaro Monje, Jose Caride, (more)
For Astarlos, living in Madrid at the time of the troubled rule of Isabel the Second in 1868, fencing is not an outmoded method of personal combat, but it is a way of life. It teaches lessons about comportment, attention, responsiveness to others, and taking responsibility for one's own life. Further, it is an aristocratic art, and the heart of aristocratic sentiment (no matter what one's station of life at birth) is to take responsibility for those who are less fortunate than oneself. Noblesse oblige. In this drama, the fencing master seeks to remain true to his values during a turbulent time which imperils his student's lives. One student is a beautiful and mysterious young woman, another is a handsome lad of aristocratic birth. Among the outsiders impinging on their lives are a police inspector and a passionate revolutionary. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Omero Antonutti, Assumpta Serna, (more)
Pedro Jarrapellejos (Antonio Ferrandis) is a ladies man who cannot turn the heads of Isabel (Aitana Sanchez-Gijon) or her beautiful daughter. When both peasant women are found raped and murdered in a brutal scene, a schoolteacher is falsely accused. Pedro knows his own nephew and his friend participated in the killings, but he uses his considerable influence over the police and courts to intimidate the witnesses into silence. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Antonio Ferrandis, Juan Diego, (more)
Four protagonists carry the action in this adventure story about betrayal, the high seas, and illegal shipping. Patxi (Alfredo Landa) is a widowed sea captain who becomes friends with Esteban, a ship's machinist (Imanol Arias), and the two end up going to Africa where they get in trouble and land in jail. Patxi's daughter Begona (Virginia Mataix) is being romantically pursued by the corrupt owner of a shipping line who is trading in illegal arms (Carlos Lucena). Ignoring her erstwhile suitor, she flies off to get her father and Esteban out of their predicament. But tragedy has already struck: Patxi is dead, and Esteban and Begona go back home where they seek justice. Much of Bandera Negra was shot in the Basque area of Spain, and the film was sponsored by the Basque regional government. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Alfredo Landa, Imanol Arias, (more)
With a message that is certainly slanted to one side, this engaging and well-wrought drama by Antonio Gimenez-Rico attacks the political and intellectual life as so much demagoguery and pedantry, and contrasts politics with the wisdom of a rustic country peasant. The story is told in flashbacks, as the recently widowed wife of a Socialist politician (Juan Luis Galiardo) meets with a successful congressman for lunch. Her late husband retired in 1977 after visiting a small and remote village and talking to a man who lived there. Mayor Cayo (Francisco Rabal), and his wife and lone dog live in one house in the village. The only other house is occupied by a man that Cayo has not associated with for many years. As the Socialist politician debates with Cayo (trying to get his vote) the peasant-mayor debunks politics in general. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Francisco Rabal, Juan Luis Galiardo, (more)
Tata (Imperio Argentina) is a matronly nurse hired by a wealthy heiress who has spent the last 13 years in a convent. Fearing she is prone to nymphomania, Tata oversees the romantic antics of the sex-starved woman as she attempts to rejoin society. Satirical jabs at the military government, the aristocracy, and the Church highlight this comedy. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Imperio Argentina, Alfredo Landa, (more)
A woman who can no longer bear abusive treatment from her husband, takes off and goes to live in Barcelona where she starts up a relationship with another man. Just as her husband has located her through a detective, he meets with a horrendous accident on the way to the airport and ends up back home from the hospital, wrapped in bandages due to his burns and completely disfigured. His wife arrives from Barcelona, but not in time to see him before he dies. Then the oddest things start happening. Furniture flies through the air, weird lights come and go, and a myriad of supernatural phenomena make it readily apparent that the dead husband is out to "get" his wife for her extra-marital affair. A priest and an expert in the paranormal are called in to help, but to no avail. The husband's body is disinterred - though that does not seem to help either. When most everything has failed, the wife, her lover, and the master of the paranormal join forces to try to exorcise the spirit of her dead husband one last time. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Cristina Galbo, Maximo Valverde, (more)
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
- Starring:
- Héctor Alterio, Ofelia Angelica, (more)









