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Spanish with English subtitles

This crucial collection offers a fresh and much-needed perspective from artists and activists alike on the current Spanish fiscal crisis and the 15M movement, which influenced popular protests around the world, including the USA’s own Occupy Wall Street. At a time of global economic crisis, Spain in Crisis: A Collective Response could not be more necessary or timely.

Spain in Crisis: A Collective Response is a DVD compilation which includes:

SPANISH REVOLUTION?
Flavio G. García, Isaki Lacuesta and David Varela,
Spain / 2011-2013 / 22 min / Spanish with English subtitles
Spanish Revolution? is a series of shorts made by prominent Spanish audiovisual artists, who attempt to observe, analyze, and understand a society weakened by the political and financial crisis.
DETAILED INFORMATION

15M: EXCELLENT. A WAKE-UP CALL. IMPORTANT. (15M: EXCELENTE. REVULSIVO…)
Stéphane M. Grueso
Spain / 2012 / 75 min / Spanish with English subtitles
On May 15th, 2011, tens of thousands of citizens occupied streets and squares in Spain for what was going to be the beginning of the biggest social change in Spanish society. This feature documentary offers a complex portrait of a movement whose affects can be seen throughout the world, most notably in the USA’s own Occupy Wall Street.
DETAILED INFORMATION

Films in this compilation were selected  from Pragda’s popular curated program, “Spain in Crisis: The Spanish Crash and the ‘Indignados’ Movement.”

Press

“Perhaps the most important exhibition ever seen in the King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center… An imaginative mix of informative and creative documentary. Highly recommended.” – Jo Labanyi, Director of the King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center, NYU

“[Grueso] dances in the impossible distance between individuals and community, memory and action, life and politics…” – Germán Labrador Méndez, Princeton University

“A visual personal diary of the occupation of Sol Square in Madrid. Grueso turns into images his rediscovery of activism, and how all of a sudden an astonishing democratic movement built a protest camp in the heart of the capital creating strong bonds of cooperation, friendship and affinity among the protesters. Without trying to speak in the name of the Indignados collective, this film offers an inspiring chronicle of one of the most relevant political events of contemporary Spanish history, gathering together the voices of some of his protagonists.” – Pablo la Parra, Art Historian, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, NYU

“Three fascinating short pieces—at times poetic, at times sarcastic, at times directly political—on the growing outrage and disaffection triggered by the economic and political crisis in Spain” – Pablo la Parra, Art Historian, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, NYU

“The Pig Slaughter by Isaki Lacuesta is a moral portrait of Barcelona and, by extension, the Spain of 2012.” – EL CONFIDENCIAL

“Political filming for [Isaki Lacuesta] is to show what you cannot see and to say what you cannot show.” – Germán Labrador Méndez, Princeton University

About the Directors
Flavio G. García is an independent filmmaker from Spain, now living in Berlin. He studied in Escuela de Cinematografía y del Audiovisual de la Comunidad de Madrid (ECAM). He makes non-fiction and fiction experimental movies, often with small formats like cell phones.
Interested in film and television since he was a child, Stéphane M. Grueso developed his career in Spain and Germany, where he lived and worked for seven years. He started working in TV programs and fiction films before turning to non-fiction filmmaking. He had a great experience traveling all around Europe, shooting and editing news and reportages for TVE (Spanish Public Broadcaster) before moving into directing and producing documentary films.

He returned to Spain to join the production company Elegant Mob Films as a partner. He also gave classes on Film Directing, Editing, Lightning, and Audio, as well as Non-Linear Editing and Documentary Film Production. His last film is Copyright, Or The Right To Copy a documentary + web project about intellectual property.

Isaki Lacuesta (Gerona, 1975) is one of the most original and important Catalan filmmakers working today. Although a documentarian by training, his films include touches straight out of fiction and an original and fascinating fusion of genres and languages. A complete retrospective of his work, “Swimming in a Sea of Images: The Cinema of Isaki Lacuesta” was organized in collaboration by the Ramon Llull Institute, Catalan Films, and the University Pompeu in 2011. The event included Lacuesta’s documentaries, narratives, and short films. Among other projects, Lacuesta is currently developing a television comedy series.

Lacuesta’s feature The Double Steps (2011) was awarded the Golden Shell at San Sebastian Film Festival. His documentary El Cuaderno de Barro (2011) received a Golden Medal at the International Festival of Audiovisual Programs (FIPA) in Biarritz. His film La Leyenda del Tiempo (2006) was recognized as the Best Spanish Film of the Year by the Catalan Critics Association.

David Varela shoot in 2008 the feature film Banaras Me and the shorts Solitude – Dawn nº 1.856280No Men´s Children, and Last Portrait, traveling with them to a large number of international film festivals. His next feature film, The Miracle, is currently in the editing stage.