Comedia madrileña explained

The so-called comedia madrileña or nueva comedia madrileña ('Madrid comedy' or 'New Madrid comedy') was a film trend or film label for urban comedies in Spain that emerged during the Transition. It was led by filmmakers such as Fernando Colomo and Fernando Trueba.

Emphasizing the urban setting of Madrid and urban concerns, it consists of light, carefree comedies.[1] [2] Characters display an unmistakable progressive worldview, with the stories tending to bring to light the inner contradictions of the generation who had grown in opposition to the Francoist regime, even if the explicitly political elements generally feature as a backdrop. The sketch of the typical protagonist of the early comedia madrileña is that of a forty-year-old urban male with an [implicit] university education, trapped in an existential crisis.[3] Despite some commonalities, mainstream comedia madrileña titles usually bear a tangential relation to the so-called Movida madrileña, insofar the latter was conventionally regarded as more "underground". However Pedro Almodóvar took over Colomo's template and moved it to a "much more transgressive" environment, indeed diving into the Movida madrileña in Pepi, Luci, Bom (1980).

Seminal works of the Spanish; Castilian: comedia madrileña are considered to be either Fernando Colomo's (1977)[4] or What's a Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? (1978), also by Colomo.[5] [6] Another iconic title belonging to the film trend is Fernando Trueba's Opera prima (1980).[7] Other examples include Trueba's , Miguel Ángel Díez's De fresa, limón y menta and José Luis Cuerda's Pares y nones. A key figure in 1980s comedia madrileña films is actress Carmen Maura.[8]

The formula exhausted with the generational leap and the aging of the young "progres" of the Transition.

The template was somewhat updated to a new social context in the 1990s with films such as Emilio Martínez Lázaro's The Worst Years of Our Lives (1994) and Álvaro Fernández Armero's Todo es mentira (1994).[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 'Tigres de papel', la película de los comienzos. Cadena SER. 15 April 2018. Antonio. Martínez.
  2. Book: Salcedo Calvo, Mónica. V Congreso Internacional de Historia y Cine: escenarios de cine histórico. 2017. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Instituto de Cultura y Tecnología. 978-84-617-7948-2. Getafe. 256. Escenario de un frenético: La movida madrileña en el cine.
  3. De la comedia popular tardofranquista a la comedia urbana de la Transición: Tradición y modernidad. 209. Miguel Ángel. Historia Actual Online. 37. 2. 2015. 1696-2060. Huerta Floriano. Ernesto. Pérez Morán.
  4. Book: Iturriaga Barco, Ángel. https://publicaciones.unirioja.es/catalogo/online/Historia_nuestro_tiempo_6/pdf/05_IturriagaAngel.pdf. 77. Evolución política y social de la transición española. Una visión a través del cine. El reinado de Juan Carlos I (1975-2014): actas VI Congreso Internacional de Historia de Nuestro Tiempo. 2019. 978-84-09-08943-7.
  5. Book: Mira, Alberto. The A to Z of Spanish Cinema. XXX. The Scarecrow Press, Inc.. Lanham · Toronto · Plymouth. 2010. 978-0-8108-7622-4.
  6. Book: Vera, Cecilia. Cómo hacer cine. 214. 2002. 84-245-0922-6. II. Editorial Fundamentos. Madrid.
  7. Book: Triana-Toribio, Núria. Spanish National Cinema. 114. London & New York. Routledge. 2003. 0-415-22059-9.
  8. Book: Rodríguez, Joaquín. Actrices españolas de los ochenta. 40. Editora Regional de Murcia. 1989. 84-7564-076-1.
  9. Urban Segregation, Game Arcades and Codified Porn: Representations of Youth in Madrid (1980-1995). Rodríguez Ortega. Vicente. Journal of Urban Cultural Studies. 3. 2. 2016. 189–205. 10.1386/jucs.3.2.189_1 .