Álex de la Iglesia Movies

A Goya Award-winning director whose stinging sense of pitch-black humor could best be represented by envisioning a Fellini clown with a scorpion's tale, Spanish filmmaker Álex de la Iglesia has achieved near stratospheric success in his native Europe while curiously remaining a fairly obscure cult figure to stateside audiences. With a warped cinematic world of greed, lust, and outsider mischief populated by masturbating Darth Vaders, militant cripples, joyously sinful priests, and murderous department-store salesmen, de la Iglesia displays a surreal world view that may simply be too bizarre for most U.S. viewers to stomach. Regardless of the reasons for audacious de la Iglesia's failure to catch on with North American viewers, however, his highly inventive camerawork and outlandish creativity have set new standards for filmmakers seeking to push the limits of cinema and keep audiences on their toes.

A lifelong comic-book fan, de la Iglesia was born in Bilbao, Spain, and found creative inspiration early on in the works of Stan Lee and Alex Raymond. Though de la Iglesia would later attend Deusto University, it was in the local bars and at the institution's film society that most of the future filmmaker's education took place. Following a brief stint as a production designer on director Enrique Urbizu's Todo por la Pasta in 2001, it was finally time for the aspiring director to strike out on his own. The result was the inspired and violent comedy short Mirindas Asesinas. A prize-winning tale of a thirsty psychopath that eventually caught the attention of Spanish filmmaking legend Pedro Almodóvar, Mirindas Asesinas showed enough promise to prompt the Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown director to sponsor de la Iglesia's feature debut, Acción Mutante, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Released in 1993, Acción Mutante gleefully blind-sided unsuspecting viewers with its strange, anti-style stance and over-the-top cartoon violence. Emerging director de la Iglesia was quickly nominated for a Best New Director Goya in addition to taking home trophies for Best Make-Up and Hairstyles, Best Production Supervision, and Best Special Effects at that year's proceedings. To say that expectations among Spanish filmgoers were high for de la Iglesia's sophomore effort would be a gross understatement, and two short years later, the man who had shocked audiences with his tale of handicapped militants successfully avoided the sophomore slump with the dazzlingly visual and gleefully sacrilegious horror comedy The Day of the Beast. The winner of six Goya awards including Best Special Effects and Best Director, The Day of the Beast instantaneously established de la Iglesia as Spain's leading master of fantasy while effectively laying the groundwork for his violent and controversial semi-sequel to David Lynch's Wild at Heart, Perdita Durango. Featuring Rosie Perez in the role of the character originally portrayed by Isabella Rossellini, Perdita Durango utilized Wild at Heart author Barry Gifford's novel 59 Degrees and Raining: The Story of Perdita Durango as the launching point for an excessive look at Santería and international fetus smuggling, and presented Oscar-nominated actor Javier Bardem and future Sopranos star James Gandolfini in two of their most unusual roles.

The dueling-comedian period comedy Dying of Laughter offered the director a chance to exercise some stylish excess in 1999, with the following year's Common Wealth delivering de la Iglesia's most assured mix of comedy and suspense to date. With plot twists and a visual style worthy of Alfred Hitchcock, not to mention the kind of outrageous humor that would make even Almodóvar blush, Common Wealth mixed indie sensibility with mainstream appeal so effectively that it earned a staggering 15 Goya nominations and landed lead actress Carmen Maura a Best Actress award (her fifth nomination and third win).

In 2002, de la Iglesia paid loving homage to the spaghetti Western genre with the affectionate comedy 800 Bullets, and then returned to the realm of nail-biting black comedy in 2004 with the department-store shocker El Crimen Perfecto. An unhinged tale of an egotistical Women's Department manager who is blackmailed into marrying the most unattractive employee in the entire store, El Crimen Perfecto offered yet another commentary on the merit of conventional beauty by busy director de la Iglesia while also serving as the filmmaker's seventh collaboration with longtime friend and screenwriter Jorge Guerricaechevarría. A brief foray into television found de la Iglesia teaming with Guerricaechevarría yet again for the 2006 shocker The Baby's Room (filmed as an episode of the small-screen horror series Films to Keep You Awake). Later that same year, the director would part ways with his longtime collaborator for the first time in his feature directorial career to helm the Guillermo Martinez-penned crime thriller Oxford Crimes. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
2008  
 
A young Argentine mathematician visiting the United Kingdom is drawn into a complex murder mystery when his landlady is brutally slain in director Alex de la Iglesia's tense and stylish thriller. John Hurt stars in a film scripted by longtime de la Iglesia collaborator Jorge Guerricaechevarría. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Elijah WoodJohn Hurt, (more)
2008  
 
Belgian comic-book artist Edgar Pierre Jacobs' elusive addition to the Blake and Mortimer series comes to life on the big screen courtesy of maverick Spanish writer/director Álex de la Iglesia in this live-action adventure that finds Captain Francis Blake and science professor Philip Mortimer attempting to solve a series of crimes committed by a mysterious character known only as The Yellow Mark. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

Read More

2006  
 
Originally filmed as part of the Six Films to Keep You Awake horror series from Spain, Alex de la Iglesia's The Baby's Room weaves the unsettling story of a young couple who moves into a renovated home with their newborn child, only to discover that sinister forces are at work around them when the baby monitor begins to malfunction in a most unsettling manner. Juan and Sonia have found the perfect home to start a family in, or at least that's what they thought when they first moved in. Everyone is content in their new surroundings until, after tucking into bed after an exhausting day, Juan begins to hear strange noises coming though the baby monitor. Upon checking the child to find that nothing is amiss, Juan assumes that he was just hearing things. When the noises persist, however, the couple makes the decision to replace the audio-only monitor with a new version that also features a video camera. Unfortunately things go from bad to worse when Juan wakes up in the middle of the night to see a complete stranger standing over his sleeping child. Racing into his child's room, Juan is relieved to find that, once again, his imagination seems to have gotten the best of him. Still, the concerned father can't shake the feeling that something supernatural is happening in his beautiful new home, and after falling into a frightening spiral of paranoia he enlists the aid of a paranormal investigator to find out what's really going on. But the truth, as Juan will soon find out, is so shocking that it will test the very limits of his sanity. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Javier GutierrezLeonor Watling, (more)
2004  
 
Add El Crimen Perfecto to QueueAdd El Crimen Perfecto to top of Queue
A playboy has the tables turned on him when he finds himself being used as a plaything by an undesirable woman in this black comedy from Spain. Rafael (Guillermo Toledo) is a self-styled ladies' man working at an upscale department store in Madrid. Rafael thinks of himself as suave and sophisticated, and he has two goals -- to run the store's apparel department, and to seduce every woman he works with. Well, every woman except for one -- Lourdes (Monica Cervera), a homely sales clerk who obviously has a crush on Rafael, but is too nervous to talk to him. Rafael's primary rival for control of the clothing department is Don Antonio (Luis Varela), and Rafael becomes filled with rage when he learns that Don Antonio has been given the job he's worked so hard to attain. Rafael gets into an argument with Don Antonio after hearing the news, and in the midst of the quarrel Don Antonio drops dead. Rafael discovers to his horror that there was a witness to Don Antonio's sudden demise -- Lourdes, who is no longer acting quite so meek. Realizing she has Rafael in a tight spot, Lourdes informs him that in exchange for her silence and help disposing of the body, he must become her lover, and it isn't long before Rafael begins to buckle under the strain of serving as her sexual slave. El Crimen Perfecto (aka The Perfect Crime) was originally released under the punning title El Crimen Ferpecto (aka The Ferpect Crime). ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Guillermo ToledoMonica Cervera, (more)
2002  
R  
Add 800 Bullets to QueueAdd 800 Bullets to top of Queue
A hyperstylized tribute to spaghetti westerns courtesy of fearless Spanish director Alex de la Iglesia, 800 Bullets finds young Carlos (Luis Castro) striking out on his own in search of his long-lost father. Swiping his shrewish businesswoman mother's (Carmen Maura) credit card and setting his sights on Almeria, Carlos begins his quest to learn the truth about his father after his curiosity is sparked while thumbing through old photographs. Carlos comes into contact with his alcoholic grandfather Julian (Sancho Gracia) shortly after arriving in Almeria, where the one-time Clint Eastwood stunt double is still chasing his dreams of stardom. Rumored to have caused Carlos' father's death years earlier when a dangerous stunt went horribly awry, Julian now spends his days staging elaborate Western shows for tourists on the abandoned film sets. As the young boy quickly wins the affections of the rough and tumble stunt crew, the arrival of his mother begins to threaten his newfound happiness when she reveals plans of turning the location into an amusement park. As the hapless crew faces the prospect of being displaced by the greed of modern society, they are forced to defend thier territory by replacing their blanks with 800 real bullets. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Sancho GraciaÁngel de Andrés Lopez, (more)
2001  
 
Daniel Diaz Torres directed this broad comedy about a family struggling to make ends meet in cash-poor Havana. Amancio (Enrique Molina) is a retired Cuban police officer who makes a point of following the letter of the law, and while many of his neighbors have different schemes to make extra money, Amancio will have no part of such doings. His wife, Concha (Coralia Veloz), and daughter, Alicia (Ketty de la Iglesia), however, have decided that necessity outweighs ethics, and they bend the local laws by renting out a room to Bjorn (Peter Lohmeyer), a professor of literature from a college in Sweden who is in Cuba on a research project. Or at least that's what he's told Concha and Alicia, but by the time Amancio finds out about this, the family has discovered there's more to Bjorn than they imagined. Hacerse el Sueco had its American premier at the 2001 Los Angeles Latino Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Peter LohmeyerEnrique Molina, (more)
2000  
 
Add Common Wealth to QueueAdd Common Wealth to top of Queue
The fifth feature of noted Spanish filmmaker Alex de la Iglesia, La Comunidad is a frenetic black comedy set in a decrepit old house in the center of Madrid. One of the house's new residents is Julia Garcia (Carmen Maura, whose performance won her a best actress award at the 2000 San Sebastian Film Festival), a real estate agent who has taken an apartment to revive her sagging marriage. One day, while engaging in some bedroom bliss, Julia and her unemployed husband Ricardo (Jesus Bonilla) are attacked by cockroaches that rain down on them through a crack in the ceiling. During a subsequent investigation of the upstairs apartment, firemen discover a man's rotting corpse. Julia later conducts her own investigation of the apartment and discovers almost 15 million dollars hidden away under the floor boards -- the result of a soccer-pool win by the apartment's dead owner. She decides to take the winnings and run, but while removing the cash, meets her neighbor Ramona (Terele Pavez), who quickly becomes suspicious of Julia's activities. It turns out that everyone in the building knew about the money and agreed to share it amongst themselves, a plan severely compromised by Julia's desire to keep the money for herself. After inviting Julia to a welcome party held by the residents' association, her neighbors go to extreme lengths to get the money, and plenty of cartoon-colored murder and mayhem ensues. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Carmen MauraEduardo Antuna, (more)
1999  
 
Add Muertos de Risa to QueueAdd Muertos de Risa to top of Queue
Show business legend is full of stories about comedy teams who don't get along offstage, but Muertos De Risa/Dying Of Laughter takes this notion to new heights in this story about two comedians who hate each other so much that it leads to attempted murder. In the early 1970's, Nino (Santiago Segura) is a nightclub singer whose career is going nowhere, and Bruno (El Gran Wyoming) is a comic who isn't doing any better. A talent agent, Julian (Alex Angulo), teams them up for a sketch on a popular TV show, and when Nino is suddenly stricken with stage fright on camera and can't speak, Bruno impulsively slaps him. The audience finds this hilarious, and their career as a duo is off and running -- while their personal relationship starts at a low point and keeps getting worse. Over time, Bruno steals Nino's girlfriend, Nino gets arrested for dealing drugs, the act periodically breaks up and reunites, and in the midst of a New Year's Eve broadcast in 1992, the two exchange gunfire on live TV. Starring two of Spain's most popular comedians, Muertos De Risa/Dying Of Laughter was massively popular in its initial release, and boasts exacting recreations of the look and mood of each decade presented, as well as witty references to Spain's contemporary political and social history. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Santiago SeguraEl Gran Wyoming, (more)
1997  
 
Add Dance with the Devil to QueueAdd Dance with the Devil to top of Queue
The title character of this Alex de la Iglesia film made her first appearance in David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990) and was originally played by Isabella Rossellini. Rosie Perez takes over the role in this blend of black comedy, graphic sex and violence, voodoo, and weirdness. Perdita Durango is pure trash, a fact she establishes at the film's beginning. Her adventures begin when she hooks up with Romeo Dolorosa (Javier Bardem), a sleek, black-clad, sexually adventurous practitioner of Santeria who routinely kills, robs banks, and steals corpses from graves for his cannibalistic blood-soaked rituals. Santos (Don Stroud) is a pedophile and a crime boss. He hires Romeo to steal a truck filled with human fetuses that are slated to be used for cosmetic experiments. Romeo accepts but feels he must make a human sacrifice before he goes. This bothers Perdita not a bit and she even picks out a pair of blonde teens for the ritual killing. The two crooks kidnap the kids, ritually feather them, sexually abuse them, and are preparing to kill them when Romeo's cheated partner shows up with policemen. The crooks and their prey manage to escape, but the scheme to commandeer the truck gets botched and an ensuing shootout between Santos' men and DEA agents goes wrong. Santos loses many men and swears revenge upon Romeo and Perdita, who continue on their journey with their two doomed victims. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Rosie PerezJavier Bardem, (more)
1995  
R  
Spanish filmmaker Alex de la Iglesia followed his outlandish sci-fi/horror debut, Accion Mutante, with this colorful apocalypse fantasy about Father Angel (Alex Angulo), a scholarly priest whose intensive research into cabalistic "Bible Code" prophecies leads to a horrific discovery: the exact birthdate of the Antichrist. Convinced that Satan's spawn will be born somewhere in Madrid on Christmas Day, Father Angel embarks on a bizarre journey down the path of sin, committing the foulest possible acts against God and humanity in order to worm his way into the Devil's inner circle and face the ultimate foe on his own turf. Comprised of equal parts high-concept horror and scathing social satire (in the mode of the director's peer and former collaborator Pedro Almodovar), this ambitious horror film has garnered a sizable cult following. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

Read More

1993  
 
Waging war against all things glamorous and beautiful, crippled terrorists Accion Mutante plot a series of attacks on society's elite, gaining a fearsome reputation before their activities are stalled with the jailing of their leader and mastermind, Ramon. Soon reunited with their newly released leader, Accion Mutante plots the elaborate wedding reception kidnapping of Patricia, a wealthy socialite. Though many die in the botched kidnapping, the gang gets away with Patricia and jumps aboard their spaceship, destined for a distant planet and a healthy ransom. Celebration is short-lived as greed kicks in and Ramon plants the seeds of distrust among his fellow mutants shortly after take-off. With all of the mutants gone sans a vengeful Siamese twin (or at least half of him), Ramon takes his cash cow to the pay-off site, though a curious case of the Stockholm syndrome has thrown an unexpected wrench into Ramon's devious plan. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Antonio ResinesFrederique Feder, (more)

BLOCKBUSTER name, design and related marks are trademarks of Blockbuster Inc. © 2009 Blockbuster Inc. All rights reserved.

Portions of Content Provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.© 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.