Black Serenade Explained

Native Name:
Nolink:y
Producer:Andrés Vicente Gómez
Cinematography:Carlos Suárez
Editing:Juan Carlos Arroyo
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Spain
Language:Spanish

Black Serenade (Spanish; Castilian: '''Tuno negro'''|links=no) is a 2001 Spanish slasher film directed and written by Pedro L. Barbero and Vicente J. Martín about a serial killer who, dressed with a tuno cape and a mask, kills underperforming university students.

Plot

A serial killer infiltrates in the tuna of the University of Salamanca and uses the confusion of the night parties to kill lousy students deemed unworthy of receiving a university education. Two cops are tasked with discovering the real identity of the killer.

Production

The film was produced by Andrés Vicente Gómez for Iberoamericana Films, Lolafilms and Telecinco, and it had the participation of Vía Digital. Filming began on 14 August 2000. Shooting locations included Salamanca, Alcalá de Henares and Madrid.[1] [2]

Release

The film was theatrically released on 20 July 2001.[3]

Critical reception

Critical reviews of the movie were quite bad. Agusto M. Torres wrote in El País that there are "irregularities in the development of history" and that "the villain is the most difficult to figure out and lacks any kind of reason, moral or psychological, to be a serial murderer" but he also indicates that it has an "effective and fine humor".[4] Jonathan Holland of Variety wrote that the "enjoyably tongue-in-cheek schlock-horror piece sticks too closely to the rules, with most of its chills and tingles too predictable for the teen auds it is aimed at".[5] Carlos Aguilar in his Guía del cine español describes the movie as "incoherent and forced" but better than other contemporary Spanish slasher films such as El arte de morir or School Killer.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La leonesa Estrella Zapatero presenta su última película. 18 August 2002. Maite. Almanza. Diario de León.
  2. Web site: Así era la Salamanca de Unamuno, Franco y Millán-Astray (según Alejandro Amenábar). Cinemanía. 29 September 2019. Fernando. Bernal.
  3. Web site: Tuno negro. 21 February 2022. Sensacine.
  4. https://elpais.com/diario/2001/07/20/cine/995580059_850215.html Miedo 'made in Spain'
  5. Web site: Black Serenade. Variety. 9 November 2001. Jonathan. Holland.
  6. Book: Aguilar, Carlos . Guía del cine español. Carlos Aguilar (writer) . 2007 . Cátedra . 978-84-376-2419-8 . 1040 .