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Categories | Film magazine |
---|---|
Founder | Juan Piqueras |
Founded | 1932 |
First issue | June 1932 |
Final issue | February 1936 |
Country | Spain |
Based in | Madrid |
Language | Spanish |
ISSN | 2107-5662 |
OCLC | 1026600646 |
Nuestro Cinema ( Spanish: Our Cinema) was a film magazine which was published in Spain between 1932 and 1936 with a one-year interruption. Its subtitle was Cuadernos Internacionales de Valorizacion Cinematografica (Spanish: International Notebooks of Cinematographic Evaluation). [1] It was one of the earliest Spanish publications in its category and was the first Communist film magazine in Spain. [1]
Nuestro Cinema was founded by Juan Piqueras in 1932. [1] [2] In the first issue dated June 1932 [3] the magazine billed itself as the "best" professional film publication free from superficial and sentimental contents unlike other film publications. [4] It was affiliated with the Communist Party [4] and had a Marxist orientation. [5] From its start in June 1932 to March 1933 Nuestro Cinema came out monthly. [3]
Piqueras edited the magazine from his Paris home. [1] Nuestro Cinema was published in Barcelona, but its editorial office was based in Madrid. [1] Piqueras published many articles in the magazine on the history of Spanish cinema. [2] These writings would be later published as a book. [2] The magazine frequently featured theoretical and historical issues about cinema. [3] It exclusively focused on left-wing movies, including those produced in the Soviet Union. [3] Nuestro Cinema also covered political agitation through articles on strikes, land reform, and the proclamation of the Catalan Statute. [6] Major contributors of the magazine were Antonio del Amo Algara, Juan Manuel Plaza, Germaine Dulac, Léon Moussinac, René Clair, Joris Ivens and Béla Balázs. [3]
Nuestro Cinema temporarily ceased publication in October 1933 and was restarted in January 1935. [3] In the second period its communist approach was not very evident. [3] It permanently folded in February 1936 [3] because of financial problems and Juan Piqueras’s health problems. [7] The title of Nuestro Cine film magazine, which was started in 1961, was a reference to Nuestro Cinema. [7]
![]() | |
Categories | Film magazine |
---|---|
Founder | Juan Piqueras |
Founded | 1932 |
First issue | June 1932 |
Final issue | February 1936 |
Country | Spain |
Based in | Madrid |
Language | Spanish |
ISSN | 2107-5662 |
OCLC | 1026600646 |
Nuestro Cinema ( Spanish: Our Cinema) was a film magazine which was published in Spain between 1932 and 1936 with a one-year interruption. Its subtitle was Cuadernos Internacionales de Valorizacion Cinematografica (Spanish: International Notebooks of Cinematographic Evaluation). [1] It was one of the earliest Spanish publications in its category and was the first Communist film magazine in Spain. [1]
Nuestro Cinema was founded by Juan Piqueras in 1932. [1] [2] In the first issue dated June 1932 [3] the magazine billed itself as the "best" professional film publication free from superficial and sentimental contents unlike other film publications. [4] It was affiliated with the Communist Party [4] and had a Marxist orientation. [5] From its start in June 1932 to March 1933 Nuestro Cinema came out monthly. [3]
Piqueras edited the magazine from his Paris home. [1] Nuestro Cinema was published in Barcelona, but its editorial office was based in Madrid. [1] Piqueras published many articles in the magazine on the history of Spanish cinema. [2] These writings would be later published as a book. [2] The magazine frequently featured theoretical and historical issues about cinema. [3] It exclusively focused on left-wing movies, including those produced in the Soviet Union. [3] Nuestro Cinema also covered political agitation through articles on strikes, land reform, and the proclamation of the Catalan Statute. [6] Major contributors of the magazine were Antonio del Amo Algara, Juan Manuel Plaza, Germaine Dulac, Léon Moussinac, René Clair, Joris Ivens and Béla Balázs. [3]
Nuestro Cinema temporarily ceased publication in October 1933 and was restarted in January 1935. [3] In the second period its communist approach was not very evident. [3] It permanently folded in February 1936 [3] because of financial problems and Juan Piqueras’s health problems. [7] The title of Nuestro Cine film magazine, which was started in 1961, was a reference to Nuestro Cinema. [7]