Martin de Ot 2023 debuta en la actuación. © Atresplayer
La plataforma Atresplayer ha comenzado el rodaje de su nueva serie musical, “Mariliendre”, que cuenta con la producción de Javier Calvo y Javier Ambrossi.
“Mariliendre” sigue a Meri Román, que era una reina de la noche gay de Madrid, pero de eso han pasado ya más de 10 años. Ahora, a sus 35, es una diva destronada que vive atormentada por su pasado y aburrida en su mediocre presente. Tras la muerte de su padre, Meri reconecta con su séquito de amigos gays, rememorando su pasado y los temazos musicales que marcaron aquella época, mientras intenta definir su caótica vida y su identidad.
Blanca Martínez será Meri Román, la protagonista de la historia. La actriz está acompañada por Martin Urrutia, Omar Ayuso, Carlos González, Yenesi, Álvaro Jurado, Mariona Terés, Mariano Peña y Nina como el elenco principal de la ficción. Completan el reparto Pepón Nieto,...
La plataforma Atresplayer ha comenzado el rodaje de su nueva serie musical, “Mariliendre”, que cuenta con la producción de Javier Calvo y Javier Ambrossi.
“Mariliendre” sigue a Meri Román, que era una reina de la noche gay de Madrid, pero de eso han pasado ya más de 10 años. Ahora, a sus 35, es una diva destronada que vive atormentada por su pasado y aburrida en su mediocre presente. Tras la muerte de su padre, Meri reconecta con su séquito de amigos gays, rememorando su pasado y los temazos musicales que marcaron aquella época, mientras intenta definir su caótica vida y su identidad.
Blanca Martínez será Meri Román, la protagonista de la historia. La actriz está acompañada por Martin Urrutia, Omar Ayuso, Carlos González, Yenesi, Álvaro Jurado, Mariona Terés, Mariano Peña y Nina como el elenco principal de la ficción. Completan el reparto Pepón Nieto,...
- 5/20/2024
- by Marta Medina
- mundoCine
Madrid — Madrid’s Latido Films, one of the Spanish-speaking world’s top sales companies for arthouse and crossover films, acquired world sales rights to Dominican director José María Cabral’s in progress “Hotel Coppelia.”
The news comes as Latido has revealed a slew of sales on top titles. Their number suggests a larger depth to this year’s Cannes Film Market, allowing the company to push out two dozen or more deals in largely major territories.
“The Realm,” the latest feature from Oscar nominated Rodrigo Sorogoyen (“The Mother”) and Spanish Academy Award submission “Champions” lead many of the sales with “The Realm” going to Somos in the U.S., Impacto in Argentina, Vision in China, A-z Films in Canada and Cineplex in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia.
Cabral’s “Hotel Coppelia” is based on the true stories of five women who, during the 1965 Dominican Civil War, made tremendous personal sacrifice to protect their own liberties.
The news comes as Latido has revealed a slew of sales on top titles. Their number suggests a larger depth to this year’s Cannes Film Market, allowing the company to push out two dozen or more deals in largely major territories.
“The Realm,” the latest feature from Oscar nominated Rodrigo Sorogoyen (“The Mother”) and Spanish Academy Award submission “Champions” lead many of the sales with “The Realm” going to Somos in the U.S., Impacto in Argentina, Vision in China, A-z Films in Canada and Cineplex in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia.
Cabral’s “Hotel Coppelia” is based on the true stories of five women who, during the 1965 Dominican Civil War, made tremendous personal sacrifice to protect their own liberties.
- 5/28/2019
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
“Juan of the Dead,” Cuba’s first zombie movie, has garnered attention just for its mere existence -- a zom-com shot on location in Havana! What a new and exciting cinematic oddity! Despite, and because of its exotic origins, “Juan of the Dead” lives up to the hype, more than delivering the goods as a raucous horror comedy, deeply schooled in the zombie genre, with a uniquely Cuban flavor.
A Spanish/Cuban co-production directed by Cuban native Alejandro Brugués, half of the pleasure in the film is enjoying the scenery and grand architecture of this majestic, dilapidated city. Havana truly is one of the characters in the film, and plays an important story role. But first, we need to meet our middle-aged heroes: the lanky, laconic Juan (Alexis Díaz de Villegas), a survivor of most everything, and the rotund Lazaro (Jorge Molina), his goofy sidekick, who fills out a wetsuit like nobody’s business.
A Spanish/Cuban co-production directed by Cuban native Alejandro Brugués, half of the pleasure in the film is enjoying the scenery and grand architecture of this majestic, dilapidated city. Havana truly is one of the characters in the film, and plays an important story role. But first, we need to meet our middle-aged heroes: the lanky, laconic Juan (Alexis Díaz de Villegas), a survivor of most everything, and the rotund Lazaro (Jorge Molina), his goofy sidekick, who fills out a wetsuit like nobody’s business.
- 6/20/2012
- by Katie Walsh
- The Playlist
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