J.J. Bigas Luna Movies
Whether making a social satire or a historical romance,
Bigas Luna's films were united with a few common threads. More often than not they contain observations or commentary on the machismo of the Spanish male; they freely blur the lines between reality and the imaginary, and at their best comprise a heady blend of ugliness and beauty, eroticism and intellect, and touching moments slashed with razor-sharp satire. Acclaimed and panned for such paradoxical, darkly comic works as
Jamón Jamón (1992),
Luna obtained a worldwide cult following.
Before he became a filmmaker, the Barcelona-born
Luna was a well-known designer and painter. His avant-garde furniture and industrial designs were world-renowned; some of his work can be seen in the Dali Museum in Figueras, and his designs earned him a pair of Silver Delta awards. After making three short films, including
Los Paisanos (1973),
Luna made his directorial debut in 1976 with Tatuaje/Tattoo, an adaptation of a novel by Manuel Vasquez Montalban.
Luna gained early recognition for his second and third films,
Bilbao and
Poodle, both of which earned international awards. Between 1980 and 1984, the up-and-coming director lived in Hollywood. His two attempts at breaking into American films, the English-language
Reborn (1981), which was actually filmed in the U.S., and the creepy horror outing
Angustia/
Anguish (1985), which had Barcelona standing in for American locations, were box-office failures. It was not until
Luna made
Jamón Jamón that he became an international sensation. A veritable feast of juicy plot twists, spicy sex, food, and zesty commentary on the stereotypes of male virility and Spain's Monegros, the film earned
Luna top prizes at that year's Venice Film Festival. While many critics raved over this extravagant piece, an equal number found the film distasteful.
Jamón Jamón was the first in
Luna's Iberian Trilogy. The second,
Huevos de Oro/
Golden Balls (1993), an even less subtle examination of male obsessions, is considered by many his least successful film, and may have damaged
Luna's reputation as a director. However, he redeemed himself with
La Teta y la Luna. It was
Luna's first film to be set in his native Catalonia and filmed in the Catalan language (although it was also released in Spanish and French). A gentle coming-of-age comedy that seamlessly blended the realities of a young boy's life with his erotic/maternal fantasies of having a breast of his own, the story was widely hailed for its sensitivity, despite potentially disturbing scenes of the child suckling two grown women; the film earned awards at the 1994 Venice Film Festival.
Luna's follow-up,
La Femme de Chambre du Titanic/
The Chambermaid on the Titanic (1997), is his most romantic film. An alternately funny and touching portrait of a husband's attempt to deal with his wife's alleged infidelity while trying to cover up his own brush with temptation, it received widespread acclaim, in part for its intelligent script but also for its subtle criticism of the continued romanticization of the
Titanic tragedy, as in
James Cameron's 1997 blockbuster. He reunited with his Jamón Jamón lead, Penélope Cruz, for 1999's Volavérunt and was jury member at the 2006 Venice Film Festival. Luna continued to work for the rest of his life, dying from cancer in 2013 while working on his last film, Segon Origen, an adaptation of Manuel de Pedrolo's novel El manuscript del segon origen, ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 1999
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Based on a historical novel by Antonio Larreta, Volaverunt imagines a number of romantic misadventures that enlivened the court of King Carlos IV, a Spanish ruler of the early 19th century. As the story opens, the beautiful Duchess of Alba (Aitana Sanchez-Gijon) is sharing a coach passing through Andalusia with artist Francisco de Goya (Jorge Perugorria), Prime Minister Manuel de Godey (Jordi Molla), and Pepita Tudo (Penelope Cruz), a peasant girl. Goya and de Godey are obviously charmed by the Duchess's exotic beauty and free-spirited attitude, but the Prime Minister is equally smitten with Pepita. The Prime Minister invites her to the royal court in Madrid, where she becomes his mistress and the subject of several of Goya's paintings. However, Queen Maria Luisa (Stefania Sandrelli) disapproves of de Godey's new love, and instead arranges for him to marry the Countess de Chinchon (Maria Alonso), a plain-Jane member of low-level royalty. The Duchess is upset with de Godey's marriage, as it keeps her away from a collection of royal jewelry she covets. When the Duchess suddenly and mysteriously dies, Goya, de Godey, and Pepita are all murder suspects and must confess where they were and what they were doing at the moments leading up to her death. While the film itself received mixed notices, Aitana Sanchez-Gijon received the Silver Shell as Best Actress at the 1999 San Sebastian Film Festival. The version screened at San Sebastian and several other festivals in the fall of 1999 was director Bigas Luna's original cut; the film's producers announced that the film would be re-edited for international release. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Aitana Sanchez-Gijon, Penélope Cruz, (more)

- 1996
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Fast-paced, funny and bursting with erotic joie-de-vivre, this outing from the always irreverent Catalan filmmaker Bigas Luna follows the lusty adventures of the bouncy Bambola and her peroxide-blond, gay brother Flavio. Their fun begins shortly after the death of their Mamma Greta, the owner of a ramshackle trattoria located beside the Po River on Italy's northern plains. Following the funeral, the two siblings decide to fix up the cafe, but first they need money. Their quest leads them to fatso financier Ugo. Barely able to control his lust for the buxom Bambola, he helps them, but when she starts batting eyes at the handsome swimmer Setimio (whom Flavio also desires), a tragedy ensues that results in Ugo's death and Setimio's incarceration. Brother and sister visit him in prison and one day, she attracts the attention of the beastly inmate Furio. Jealous of her relationship with Setimio, Furio orders him gang raped. The event is life changing for Setimio who suddenly looks at Flavio with new, wanting eyes. At the same time, Bambola goes to Furio's cell to engage in a fast, furious coupling that leaves her crazy for more. Upon his release, Furio heads for the trattoria to continue the affair. But trouble comes when Furio refuses to move the relationship beyond their beastly wrangling. He goes too far one night when he comes to bed with a live eel for Bambola to play with. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1994
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This Spanish/French film presents a loving ode to a woman's breasts and the three men who love them. The fairy tale is told from the viewpoint of 9-year old Tete, who jealous of his new brother's access to his mother's breasts, implores the moon to give him a nurturing breast of his own. French cabaret performers Estrellita, the Queen of Stuttgart, and her jealous husband Maurice, come to town with their surprisingly vulgar act. When Tete sees Estrellita, he knows his wish has been granted. Trailer-park electrician Miquel is also very attracted to Estrellita's charming chest and begins serenade her. Tete gets to sample her charms after he brings her a frog. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Mathilda May, Miguel Poveda, (more)

- 1993
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In this soft-porn drama, the oversexed hunk Benito Javier Bardem) spends a good portion of his military service in north Africa dreaming of sex, money and power - but mostly sex. He can barely keep himself in control, and is constantly grabbing his crotch. Somehow, when he is released from the service, he marries the daughter (Maria de Medeiros) of a real moneybags, and he uses some of those resources to build a gigantic skyscraper in the form of a phallus. After a car crash leaves him partially paralyzed and very despondent, his ill-used wife kicks him out and he moves to Miami, where he picks up a woman who (in a reversal of roles) loves 'em and leaves 'em. For some reason, this circumstance cuts our previously almost irrepressibly priapic hero to the heart, and he sobbingly realizes the extent of his losses. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Javier Bardem, Maribel Verdú, (more)

- 1990
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The sexual experiences of the insatiable and ever more kinky temptress Lulu (Francesca Neri) are chronicled in this virtually plotless film. In the story, Lulu marries the American professor who first seduced her at age fifteen in a car (of course). She tires of hanging out with him and begins seeking sex of all kinds, hanging out in some pretty seedy places in the process. Along the way, she has intimate encounters with male homosexuals, transvestites, and indulges in a bit of sadomasochism. This film made a big splash in Spain while it was being produced because the first woman who was offered the lead (Angela Molina) quite publicly refused it, for (obvious) reasons that spurred interest in the final production. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Francesca Neri, Oscar Ladoire, (more)

- 1985
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This suspense thriller about a bad relationship concerns Lola (Angela Molina), who is working hard for a living but becomes caught up in a sado-masochistic affair with the vicious Mario (Feodor Atkine). Finally breaking away from her own neurosis and a punishing lifestyle, Lola meets and marries Robert (Patrick Bauchau) and starts a new life with him in Barcelona. They have a young daughter but after a few years, Mario suddenly bursts into their lives claiming that the daughter is really his. Nothing but trouble lies ahead. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ángela Molina, Patrick Bauchau, (more)

- 1980
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The slow mental and emotional disintegration of the mother of an autistic child is the main theme of this evocative psychological drama by J.A. Salgot. Since incest and murder are also involved, this is not exactly a film for all audiences. Clara (Victoria Abril) is graphically shown giving birth and subsequently followed as she tries to cope with the ever-more obvious autism of her new son. She leads a normal life as a keypunch operator, but her son's affliction takes its toll. She experiments with illegal drugs, eventually loses her job, and slowly recedes into a shell that is almost as impenetrable as her son's. There seems to be no ordinary way out of her gradual decline, no solution to her problem that started long ago when she refused to give her son up to an institution. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Victoria Abril

- 1979
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A brother and sister live together in a relationship which is unhealthily close, and has overtones of incest. The unpleasant couple are involved in other deranged and disgusting activities as well, including feeding raw meat (possibly from live puppies) to their pet poodle. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Angel Jové, Consol Tura, (more)

- 1978
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- 1978
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Bilbao is a Basque city in Spain, the title of a song by Lotte Lenya, and (in this movie) the name of the prostitute being stalked by an ominously silent, obsessed and deeply disturbed man. He collects information about any of the three Bilbaos in a scrapbook, and for a long time only follows the girl around before causing her to suffer a grisly fate at his hands. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Angel Jové, Maria Martin, (more)

- 2001
- R
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Directed by J.J. Bigas Luna, Son De Mar (Sound of the Sea) follows Ulises, a young man who moved to a small coastal city just as summer was coming to an end. Though he arrived in order to teach literature at a local academic institution, he finds himself with much more than he had bargained for, including a newfound appreciation for the smells, sounds, tastes, and women of the Mediterranean. Eventually, he falls in love with Martina, one of his students. Enchanted by his stories and historical know-how, Martina returns his feelings, and is crushed when he mysteriously disappears. The film features Jordi Mollà, Leonor Watling, and Eduard Fernández. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jordi Mollà, Leonor Watling, (more)

- 1988
- R
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Poltergeist-purger Zelda Rubinstein toplines this interesting, twisty psycho-thriller from Spain, which makes clever (though repetitive) use of its movie-within-a-movie premise. As the star of the horror film "The Mommy," Rubinstein plays a mother who hypnotizes her son (Michael Lerner) into seeking more victims to supply her growing collection of human eyeballs. "The Mommy" seems also to exert a weird hypnotic effect on the audience watching it, particularly one impressionable fellow who mirrors Lerner's actions by stalking fellow movie patrons... just as the onscreen murderer is entering a movie theater to do the same thing. If this sounds confusing, that's probably because it is. The interesting premise wears thin about halfway through, with the relentless attempts at viewer disorientation becoming more tiresome than frightening. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Zelda Rubinstein, Michael Lerner, (more)

- 1997
- NR
Cuca Canals and director Bigas Luna (Jamon, Jamon) adapted Didier Decoin's novel, winner of the Goncourt Prize, for this period film, a Spanish-French-Italian co-production. French foundry worker Horty (Oliver Martinez), married to Zoe (Romane Bohringer), wins a competition of strength. His prize is a trip to witness the Titanic's launch from Southhampton. At his hotel room, Marie (Aitana Sanchez-Gijon) tells him that she is a Titanic chambermaid with nowhere to stay. Although she sleeps in his bed, they don't have sex. When Horty awakens, she's gone. Later, he spots a photographer taking her picture and buys the photograph. Horty returns to France, where he hears rumors that his wife Zoe has been sleeping with the foundry boss. After his drinking buddies find the photo of Marie, they ask him about her, and he begins to fabricate a tale -- seen in flashbacks -- of his encounters with Marie, a story which increases in eroticism as he retells it night after night with increasing theatrical flourishes and embellishments. Southhampton scenes were actually filmed in Trieste. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Olivier Martinez, Aitana Sanchez-Gijon, (more)

- 1992
- NR
Class, sex, and food are the obsessions of this Spanish comedy drama, an international hit from writer and director J.J. Bigas Luna that plays like a cross between the lusty Like Water for Chocolate (1992) and the early work of Pedro Almodovar. In a small town in Spain's arid Monegros region, young underwear factory executive Jose Luis (Jordi Molla) falls in love with the beautiful Silvia (Penelope Cruz), a worker on the shop floor. When Silvia becomes pregnant, Jose Luis wants to marry her, but his mother Conchita (Stefania Sandrelli), the factory owner, is appalled by the thought of her son marrying a working-class girl, especially one who is the daughter of a prostitute, Carmen (Anna Galiena). So Conchita hatches a scheme to woo Silvia away from her son by hiring handsome model Raul (Javier Bardem) to seduce the girl. A ham factory employee with aspirations to become a bullfighter, Raul's charms work their magic on both Silvia and Conchita, much to the dismay of Jose Luis, who seeks comfort in the arms of his sometime lover, Carmen. Jamon Jamon (1992) was the winner of a Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Stefania Sandrelli, Anna Galiena, (more)