Carlos Saura, a leading and enduring Spanish director, dies at 91

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 20, 2024


Carlos Saura, a leading and enduring Spanish director, dies at 91
Called “one of the fundamental filmmakers in the history of Spanish cinema,” he began making movies under Franco, often hiding his messages in allegory.

by Neil Genzlinger



NEW YORK, NY.- Carlos Saura, a Spanish director who began making films during the regime of Francisco Franco and was still making them at his death, exploring Spanish identity through allegory-rich storytelling and, later, vividly capturing flamenco and other art forms, died Friday. He was 91.

The Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain said he died at his home but did not say where. The next day, the Goya Awards, Spain’s annual film awards, had planned to present him with the Honorary Goya Award in recognition of his “having shaped the history of modern Spanish cinema,” as the organization put it when announcing the award in October.

Instead, he received the statuette a few days before his death, the organization said. It called him “one of the fundamental filmmakers in the history of Spanish cinema.”

Saura was a photographer who began making short films in 1956 and released his first feature, “The Delinquents,” about youths living on the edge in Madrid’s slums, in 1959.

Filmmakers under Franco, who came to power during the Spanish Civil War in the late 1930s and controlled the country until his death in 1975, had to be careful not to run afoul of censors. Saura became adept at alluding obliquely to Spanish history and the strains the country endured, as he did in his third feature film, “The Hunt” (1966), the story of two middle-aged men who go on what is supposed to be a relaxing rabbit hunt with a business tycoon and his nephew. Things take a brutal turn.

When the movie played in Manhattan in 1967, Bosley Crowther wrote in The New York Times, “The vivid manifestations of wholesale shooting of frightened rabbits as they scoot across the hills of an area that was a famous section of battlefield in the Civil War are unmistakable allusions to that conflict of friend-against-friend and brother-against-brother that so thoroughly affected the politics and society of Spain.”

“‘The Hunt,’” he added, “is the toughest Spanish picture I have ever seen, and the most amazingly revealing.”

That kind of filmmaking sometimes got him in hot water with government censors. In 1971, his initial script for “Anna and the Wolves” was blocked by the Information Ministry. It told the story of a young governess who takes a job in a broken-down mansion inhabited by three brothers, each of whom pursues her.

“They represent for me the three monsters of Spain,” Saura told the Times in 1971, “perversions of religiosity, repressed sexuality and the authoritarian spirit.” Of having his script blocked, he said, “They have made dust of me.”

He eventually made the movie, however; it showed at the Cannes Film Festival in 1973. The movie starred Geraldine Chaplin, a daughter of Charlie Chaplin, who had appeared in several other Saura films and had a long romantic relationship with him. Her character meets a gruesome end.

“The ending, when she is raped, shot and tortured by her respective assailants, is an unmistakable indictment of Spain’s stifling social conventions,” film critic Alexander Walker wrote in The Evening Standard of London, “and a brave one to have made on the home ground.”

The year after Franco’s death, Saura won a special jury award at Cannes with another film that looked to the past, “Cría Cuervos,” about a girl (played by Ana Torrent, who went on to a long career) with a trauma-filled childhood. (Chaplin played her as an adult.) Vincent Canby, writing in the Times, called the movie “funny and heartbreaking and bursting with life.”

Saura soon began to focus on cultural subjects, especially dance, whose beauty and excitement he had a knack for capturing on film. “Blood Wedding” (1981), “Carmen” (1983) and “El Amor Brujo” (1986) all featured flamenco dancer Antonio Gades. “Flamenco” (1995) was a music- and dance-filled documentary, as was “Flamenco Flamenco” (2010). “Tango” (1999) was a musical drama built around that dance genre.

“It’s no slight to the lovers seen in Carlos Saura’s thrilling ‘Tango’ to say that the kissing seen here is less torrid than the dancing,” Janet Maslin wrote in her review in the Times.

Marvin D’Lugo, a professor at Clark University and the author of “The Films of Carlos Saura: The Practice of Seeing” (1991), drew a connection between the director’s work during the Franco years and after them.

“Saura’s great theme was the painful memories of the Civil War visited on contemporary Spaniards,” he said by email. “A photographer before he was a filmmaker, his particular genius, and what brought him to international acclaim early on, came from his unique ability to visually translate trauma onto the bodies of his characters. This is as much a cultural as a political narrative thread, and it guided him in the post-Franco years as he shaped the plots of his dance films around the images of bodies now creatively submitting to artistic design.”

Carlos Saura Atarés was born on Jan. 4, 1932, in Huesca, in northeastern Spain. His mother was a pianist, and his father worked in the Interior Ministry. After the Civil War he was separated from his parents for a time, living with his maternal grandmother, but the family eventually reunited in Madrid.

He studied engineering at the University of Madrid but was also having some success as a photographer, particularly with portraits of ballet and flamenco dancers, and in 1952 he switched to the recently created National Film School.

Saura’s most recent film, “Las Paredes Hablan,” a documentary about art, was released a week before his death.

His survivors include his wife, Eulàlia Ramón, and several children.

Saura made a sequel of sorts to “Anna and the Wolves” called “Mama Turns 100,” released in 1979. The contrast was notable: “Anna,” made during the Franco years, was a drama; “Mama,” looking in on some of the same characters, was more of a comic drama. It was nominated for the Oscar for best foreign language film.

It was as close as he came to realizing one dream.

“I often think it would be fantastic, a magnificent experience, to make the same picture over and over, year after year,” he told LA Weekly in 1984, “to watch it evolve — to see things differ.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

February 15, 2023

When a visit to the museum becomes an ethical dilemma

Carlos Saura, a leading and enduring Spanish director, dies at 91

LACMA acquires largest collection of blockchain artworks

Hauser & Wirth opens an exhibition of recent paintings by Rita Ackermann

National Gallery of Art acquires painting by Kiki Kogelnik and 17th-century nautilus cup

The collection of bohemian artist Xavier Martinez and his family goes up for bid at Turner Auctions + Appraisals

'Robert Mangold: Paintings and Works on Paper 1989-2022' on view at Pace

Exhibitions present a retrospective of the history of printmaking over a period of six centuries

Burt Bacharach, whose buoyant pop confections lifted the '60s, dies at 94

Cantor Art Gallery showcases the famed Chertsey Tiles and the visual culture of medieval Europe

John McInnis Auctioneers announces an online-only Asian Collections Auction

Organizations partner to digitize archive connected to Black and Native American soldiers from the Revolutionary War

The Drawing Room presents an exhibition of Mary Ellen Bartley's Morandi's Books photographs

Museum of Architectural Drawing opens an exhibition of works by Italian architect Aldo Rossi

Robert Geddes, 99, transformative Architecture Dean at Princeton, dies

For Burt Bacharach, 'Promises, Promises' was one Broadway hit too many

Dresser masterpiece emerges on top at Bonhams sale

Annie Morris and Idris Khan present their practices side by side in new exhibition at Newlands House

Stuart Lochhead Sculpture announces its participation in TEFAF Maastricht 2023

Mellon, Ford, Getty, and Terra Foundations announce new $5M initiative designed to advance Latinx Art in museums

A nod to modernity and Japanese tradition in new show at Appleton Museum of Art

Adelson Galleries Palm Beach presents Man Ray: A Portrait of Love

Sainsbury Centre becomes first UK museum to introduce universal 'Pay if and What You Can' ticketing

Exhibition looks into a 1960 show housed by the Circolo Il Pozzetto in Padua

Best yellow CS:GO Skins

AI and Machine Learning's Effects on Digital Asset Management

Top tourist attractions of Las Vegas that you should check out!

How I Spend Gaming Nights at the Best Online Casino for Canadian Players




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful