Antonio Banderas Movies
Internationally known for his charisma and smoldering good looks,
Antonio Banderas is the ultimate manifestation of the Latin heartthrob. Born in Málaga, Spain on August 10, 1960, Banderas wanted to become a professional soccer player until a broken foot sidelined his dreams at the age of fourteen. He went on to enroll in some drama classes, eventually joining a theatre troupe that toured all over Spain. His work in the theatre, and his performances on the streets, eventually landed him a spot with the National Theatre of Spain.
While performing with the theatre, Banderas caught the attention of director
Pedro Almodóvar, who cast the young actor in his film debut,
Laberinto de Pasione (
Labyrinth of Passion) (1982). He went on to appear in the director's
La Ley del Deseo (
Law of Desire) (1984), making headlines with his performance as a gay man, which required him to engage in his first male-to-male onscreen kiss. After Banderas appeared in Almodóvar's
Matador (1986), the director cast him in his internationally acclaimed
Mujeres al Borde de un Ataque de Nervios (
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown) (1988). The recognition Banderas gained for his role increased two years later when he starred in Almodóvar's controversial
Atame! (
Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!) as a mental patient who kidnaps a porn star (
Victoria Abril) and keeps her tied up until she returns his love.
Banderas made his first stateside appearance as an unwitting object of
Madonna's affections in
Truth or Dare (1991). The following year, still speaking next to no English, he starred in his first American film,
The Mambo Kings. It was a testament to his acting abilities that, despite having to learn all of his lines phonetically, Banderas still managed to turn in a critically praised performance as a struggling musician. He broke through to mainstream American audiences as the gay lover of AIDS-afflicted lawyer Andrew Beckett (
Tom Hanks) in
Philadelphia (1993). The film's success earned Banderas wide recognition, and the following year he was given a substantial role in
Neil Jordan's high-profile adaptation of
Anne Rice's
Interview with the Vampire, which allowed him to share the screen with the likes of
Tom Cruise and
Brad Pitt.
Banderas subsequently appeared in a number of films of widely varying quality, doing particularly strong work in
Desperado (1995),
Evita (1998), and
The Mask of Zorro (1998). In 1999, he made his first foray into directing with
Crazy in Alabama, a black comedy starring
Melanie Griffith, to whom he had been married since 1996. The following year he starred as an aspiring boxer opposite
Woody Harrelson in
Play It to the Bone, portrayed a Cuban tycoon with a bad seed bride (
Angelina Jolie) in Original Sin, and starred alongside
Bob Hoskins and
Wes Bentley in The White River Kid. Well established as a hearthrob and a talented dramatic actor by the end of the 1990s, the fact that Desperato director Robert Rodriguez was the only director to have expolored Banderas' comic potential (Banderas provided one of the few memorable performances in Rodriguez's segment of the otherwise abysmal Four Rooms (1995)) hinted at a heretofore unexplored but potentially lucrative territory for the actor. Later approached by Rodriguez to portray the super-spy patriarch in the family oriented adventure comedy Spy Kids (2001), Banderas charmed children and adults alike with his role as a kidnapped agent whose children must discover their inner stregnth in order to rescue their mother and father. After reprising his role in the following year's Spy Kids 2: Island of Lost Dreams, Banderas would next return to more adult oriented roles in both Brian DePalma's Femme Fatale and the ill-fated Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever (both 2002). After essaying a more historic role in the dramatic biopic Frida (also 2002), the remarkably diverse actor would one again team with Rodriguez for the sprawling Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003).
In 2004 he joined the highly successful Shrek franchise voicing Puss In Boots, and the character became so popular that he appeared in each of the following sequels, and was the subject of his own feature in 2011. In 2005 he played Zorro again, and he had a major part in the dance film Take the Lead. In 2011 he reteamed for the first time in two decades with Pedro Almodovar in the Hitchcock-inspired The Skin I Live In, and the next year he appeared as a mysterious international espionage figure in the action film Haywire. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

- 1985
- R
Leaving a lot of paths started but untrodden, this routine drama about a man fighting the system and losing flips back and forth between prison scenes, bank scenes, and what appears to be an incompetent Spanish court system. Cesar (Patxi Bisquert) is an up-and-coming banker, a champion of liberal causes, and a conscientious objector -- all rolled into one. After he discovers some irregularities in the bank's accounts, he tries to blow the whistle, but that only lands him in prison on the charge of forging a check. From that moment onward, things only seem to get worse. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Pepa Flores, Patxi Bisquert, (more)

- 1984
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Carlos Saura's The Stilts (Los Zancos) features Fernando Gomez as a middle-aged professor/playwright. Falling head over heels in love with actress Laura DelSol, Gomez begins obsessing on the girl, despite her unwillingness to make a commitment. When another, younger man (Francisco Rabal) enters the scene, the drama darkens into melodrama. While the story material in The Stilts may seem old-hat at first glance, Spanish filmmaker Carlos Saura invests his characters with enough conviction and humanity to keep the viewers riveted to their chairs. Eschewing his previous "nonlinear" narratives (which ignored such trivialities as chronology and reality), Saura directs The Stilts in an austere, near-documentary fashion. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Fernando Fernán Gómez, Laura del Sol, (more)

- 1984
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Expatriate Argentine Rodolfo Kuhn directed this chilling drama about two fascistic thugs who torture victims sent to them by an anonymous, unseen "Señor Galindez." One of the two is a family man, settled in with his wife and daughter to a typical homey lifestyle, and the other man lives alone and is decidedly vicious by inclination. The two men are sent to the building where they torture -- in order to wait for someone they have to train (played by Antonio Banderas). The banality of evil is nowhere more apparent than in this story of inhuman behavior and empty minds. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Héctor Alterio, Joaquin Hinojosa, (more)

- 1984
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In the ancient Phoenician city now known as Almería on the southeastern coast of Spain, three Civil Guards were convicted in 1981 of torturing and then murdering three men that were suspected Basque terrorists. This well-paced and suspenseful docudrama is about that case and how the courageous prosecutor -- insightfully interpreted by Agustín Gonzalez -- had to persevere in the face of death threats to himself and his family, had to brave the ominous power of the Civil Guards of Spain, and had to overcome the judges' reluctance to proceed with the case. The chilling presence of the Civil Guards at every turn in the court trial are like fascist remnants from the rule of Francisco Franco that ended only five years or so before these murders were committed. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Agustin Gonzalez, Fernando Guillén, (more)

- 1983
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- 1982
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In this melodrama, an over-the-hill hooker (she is 33), sobs her heart out when her lover (a 21-year-old Antonio Banderas in his first feature-length role) leaves her after two years of non-connubial bliss. That dramatic moment happens only after other events have taken them through Madrid's back alleys, front streets, and in one case, the home of a drag queen. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Queta Claver, Antonio Banderas, (more)

- 1982
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Spanish director Pedro Almodovar's films are colorful, sexy, and very funny, and this one is a perfect introduction to his work. An emperor's son, Reza Niro (Imanol Arias), comes to Madrid in disguise and sleeps with Sadeq (Antonio Banderas), an Islamic terrorist with a highly developed sense of smell. Sadeq's group wants to kidnap Reza, who disguises himself as a punk rock singer and falls in love with Sexilia (Cecilia Roth), a nymphomaniac singer for a rival band. There's also a wealthy woman (Helga Line) who wants Reza's sperm for an artificial insemination, a delirious dry-cleaner who sleeps with his own daughter, and other bizarre characters. Almodovar takes delight in intersecting lives, chance meetings, and humor that springs from the strangest of situations. He also has the rare talent of presenting potentially offensive material in such a whimsical and affectionate fashion that no matter what his characters do, the audience loves them as much as he does. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Cecilia Roth, Imanol Arias, (more)