From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Vida en sombras)
Life in Shadows
Directed by Lorenzo Llobet Gracia
Written by
Starring
Cinematography Salvador Torres Garriga
Edited by Ramón Biadiú
Music by Jesús García Leoz
Production
company
Castilla Films
Release date
  • 6 April 1949 (1949-04-06)
Running time
90 minutes
CountrySpain
Language Spanish

Life in Shadows (Spanish:Vida en sombras) is a 1949 Spanish drama film directed by Lorenzo Llobet Gracia and starring Fernando Fernán Gómez, María Dolores Pradera and Isabel de Pomés. [1] It was made in Barcelona.

Plot

Carlos, born in a fair booth related to cinema, and author of an amateur film when he was fourteen years old, becomes a professional camera operator, since his entire life has been marked by that art .

He married Ana, to whom he proposed during a screening of Romeo and Juliet. When the Civil War breaks out, he separates from his wife to film some shots of the conflict and she dies in a shootout. To escape his remorse, he decides to become a war reporter, and after the end of the war he falls into depression, coming to hate cinema.

Cast

References

  1. ^ Kinder p.401

Bibliography

  • Marsha Kinder. Blood Cinema: The Reconstruction of National Identity in Spain. University of California Press, 1993.

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Vida en sombras)
Life in Shadows
Directed by Lorenzo Llobet Gracia
Written by
Starring
Cinematography Salvador Torres Garriga
Edited by Ramón Biadiú
Music by Jesús García Leoz
Production
company
Castilla Films
Release date
  • 6 April 1949 (1949-04-06)
Running time
90 minutes
CountrySpain
Language Spanish

Life in Shadows (Spanish:Vida en sombras) is a 1949 Spanish drama film directed by Lorenzo Llobet Gracia and starring Fernando Fernán Gómez, María Dolores Pradera and Isabel de Pomés. [1] It was made in Barcelona.

Plot

Carlos, born in a fair booth related to cinema, and author of an amateur film when he was fourteen years old, becomes a professional camera operator, since his entire life has been marked by that art .

He married Ana, to whom he proposed during a screening of Romeo and Juliet. When the Civil War breaks out, he separates from his wife to film some shots of the conflict and she dies in a shootout. To escape his remorse, he decides to become a war reporter, and after the end of the war he falls into depression, coming to hate cinema.

Cast

References

  1. ^ Kinder p.401

Bibliography

  • Marsha Kinder. Blood Cinema: The Reconstruction of National Identity in Spain. University of California Press, 1993.

External links



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