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Blancanieves

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Blancanieves
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Pablo Berger
Produced by Ibon Cormenzana

Jérôme Vidal Pablo Berger

Screenplay by Pablo Berger
Based on Snow White by Jacob Grimm

Wilhelm Grimm

Starring Macarena GarcíaMaribel Verdú
Music by Alfonso de Vilallonga
Cinematography Kiko de la Rica
Edited by Fernando Franco
Distributed by Wanda (Spain)
Release date
  • 8 September 2012 (TIFF)
  • 28 September 2012 (Spain)
Running time 105 minutes
Countries Spain

France

Language No dialogue (Intertitles and songs in Spanish)
Box office $240,310 (US)

Blancanieves (known as Blancaneu in Catalan) is a 2012 Spanish black-and-white silent drama film written and directed by Pablo Berger. Based on the 1812 fairy tale Snow White by the Brothers Grimm, the story is set in a romantic vision of 1920s Andalusia. However, the film appproaches storytelling through the integration of Spanish culture from characters' names to traditions they follow[1]. Additionally, the film alludes to other fairy tales including Cinderella and Little Red Riding Hood. While it retells stories originally told through tales based in fantasy, it derails from the traditional storytelling method that ends with a happily ever after. Instead, the film is rather dark and ends in tragedy. Berger calls it a "love letter to European silent cinema."

Blancanieves was Spain's 85th Academy Awards official submission to Best Foreign Language category, but it did not make the shortlist. The film won the Special Jury Prize and an ex-aequo Best Actress "Silver Shell" Award for Macarena García at the 2012 San Sebastián International Film Festival. It was also nominated in every category for which it was eligible at the 27th Goya Awards (except for Best Sound), winning ten Goya Awards, including the Best Film.


Plot[edit]

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As a Spanish adaptation of the Brother Grimm fairytale, Snow White, the film Blancanieves follows the life of Carmen. Her mother passed away during childbirth, and her father was left paralyzed after a traumatic bull fighting incident shortly before her birth. Her grandmother cares for her, but after her death, she is left in the care of her step-mother who married her father for his fame and riches he accumulated as a bull fighter.[2] She mistreats Carmen's father, as he is often left helpless in a room, however Carmen spends time communicating as best as she can with her father.

After consistent abuse and mistreatment, Carmen is fearful for her safety and wellbeing. One day, she is sent out into the woods to gather flowers. The huntsman is sent out after her, where he assaults her, attempts to drown her, and leaves her for dead. She is unconscious, floating downstream, when a group of bull fighters find her and carry her to their home. When she comes to consciousness, she is unable to remember her history, including her name. They begin referring to her as Blancanieves, which translates to Snow White, because of her fair appearance. She grows close to the group of men, who are a traveling spectacle of bull fighters with dwarfism. Eventually she begins bullfighting herself, unaware that her natural skill comes from the time she spent practicing with her father as a child.

Carmen's step-mother learns of Carmen's work as a bull fighter and is left in disbelief, as she thought Carmen was killed many years ago. She attends a fight, masked in a veil. After a successful fight in the bullfighting ring, the audience is throwing flowers to Carmen. The step-mother reaches out and offers her a poisoned apple. Carmen unsuspectingly takes it, and takes a bite. She instantly falls to the ground, and the audience begins to panic. She is transferred into a glass coffin, as they are all under the impression she has passed away. Rather than laying her to rest, they create a spectacle out of her. They begin charging the public for an opportunity to kiss the famous bull fighter, Blancanieves. In the end, the focus shifts to Carmen laying in the casket, where a single tear runs down her cheek. [2]

Production[edit]

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The inspiration for the film began when writer-director Pablo Berger saw a photograph of bullfighting dwarves in España Oculta (1989, ISBN 8477820686), by Cristina García Rodero. By 2003, Berger had written Blancanieves and was working to raise funds for it soon after his film Torremolinos 73 was appearing at festivals. In May 2011, he was working on the storyboards for Blancanieves, a film he had in the works for eight years, and he was about to begin principal photography when news reached him that The Artist had been shown at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival: [3]

"Nobody knew about The Artist until it appeared in Cannes. It was completely out of the blue. I was in my office in Madrid, doing the storyboards for my film, when a producer friend sent me a text message from the festival saying, 'I've just seen The Artist, it's black and white and silent and it's going to be huge.' I almost threw my phone against the wall. The high concept was gone."

According to Berger, Blancanieves is a "love letter to European silent cinema, ... especially French. Abel Gance for me is God. Movies like Napoleon, J'Accuse!, La Roue are extraordinary."

Pablo Berger emphasized the idea that his silent film adaptation of the fairytale, Snow White, takes a much darker approach than traditional tellings of the tale. Even on the cover of the Blancanieves DVD, there is text that reads, "They never told you the story like this before ..." emphasizing the idea that this interpretation is different from the others. [1]


While the silent, black and white aesthetic was applied to the film as an homage to films from the 20th century, it additionally used modern techniques to give the film a unique look. The cinematic techniques and style included depth throughout many shots. The styling of each shot provides a dynamic effect on the visuals in the film. Techniques like this were not possible during the time in which silent films were popular. The film works to address and include various technologies throughout the past century. While the camera work and aspects of the picture are modern, there are also techniques and styles used that reflect film from the 20th century.

Reception[edit]

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This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2018)

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Blancanieves holds an approval rating of 95%, based on 112 reviews, and an average rating of 7.8/10. Its consensus reads: "Smartly written and beautiful to behold, Blancanieves uses its classic source material to offer a dark fantasy tale, delightfully told." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 82 out of 100, based on 21 critics, indicating "Universal acclaim".

The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw called it "extraordinarily enjoyable", awarding it five stars out of five and saying Pablo Berger "finds new life and heart in the old myth – certainly more than the recent Hollywood retreads – and daringly locates possibilities for both evil and romance in the ranks of the dwarves themselves"; the director "takes inspiration from Hitchcock, with hints of Rebecca and Psycho, Buñuel, Browning and Almodóvar, and conjures a fascinatingly ambiguous ending: melancholy, eerie and erotic. A film to treasure."

 
Director Pablo Berger and others from the production team participate in a panel in Spain.[4]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four stars, writing that the film "Is a full-bodied silent film of the sort that might have been made by the greatest directors of the 1920s, if such details as the kinky sadomasochism of this film's evil stepmother could have been slipped past the censors." Later, he chose it to be shown at the 2013 Roger Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival.

The film, while resembling styles of the 20th century, focused on the story of a female lead. The main character's name, Carmen, emphasizes the importance of the characters divinity, as it means "song" or "garden". However, she fits into the mold of traditional beauty standards set up for women, that have been present since much earlier than just films in the 20th century. This form of representation is often critiqued, as are minimal forms of diversity represented, yet still adhere to most traditional beauty norms. [5]

Accolades[edit]

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List of awards and nominations
Award Category Nominee Result
European Film Awards Best Film Nominated
Best Director Pablo Berger Nominated
Best Costume Designer Paco Delgado Won
5th Gaudí Awards Best Film in Catalan Language Won
Best Director Pablo Berger Nominated
Best Screenplay Pablo Berger Nominated
Best Female Lead Ángela Molina Nominated
Maribel Verdú Nominated
Best Cinematography Kiko de la Rica Nominated
Best Art Direction Alain Bainée Won
Best Costume Design Paco Delgado Won
Best Film Editing Fernando Franco Nominated
Best Make-Up and Hairstyles Fermín Galán and Sylvie Imbert Nominated
Best Original Score Alfonso de Villalonga Won
Best Special/Visual Effects Reyes Abades and Ferrán Piquer Nominated
27th Goya Awards Best Film Won
Best Director Pablo Berger Nominated
Best Actor Daniel Giménez Cacho Nominated
Best Actress Maribel Verdú Won
Best Supporting Actor Josep Maria Pou Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Ángela Molina Nominated
Best New Actor Emilio Gavira Nominated
Best New Actress Macarena García Won
Best Original Screenplay Pablo Berger Won
Best Cinematography Kiko de la Rica Won
Best Editing Fernando Franco Nominated
Best Art Direction Alain Bainée Won
Best Production Supervision Josep Amorós Nominated
Best Special Effects Reyes Abades and Ferrán Piquer Nominated
Best Costume Design Paco Delgado Won
Best Makeup and Hairstyles Sylvie Imbert and Fermín Galán Won
Best Original Score Alfonso de Villalonga Won
Best Original Song No Te Puedo Encontrar by Pablo Berger and Juan Gómez "Chicuelo" Won
Latin ACE Awards Best Film Won
Best Actress Maribel Verdú Won
Best Supporting Actor Daniel Giménez Cacho Won
26th Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Original Score Alfonso de Villalonga Nominated
14th Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards Best Foreign Language Film Nominated
39th César Awards Best Foreign Film Nominated
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA Best International Film Nominated
Argentinean Film Critics Association Awards Best Foreign Film, Spanish Language (Mejor Película Iberoamericana) Pablo Berger Nominated
Ariel Awards, Mexico Best Latin-American Film (Mejor Película Iberoamericana) Pablo Berger Won
ASECAN Best Spanish Film Pablo Berger Won
Best Editoing Fernando Franco Nominated
Australian Film Critics Association Awards Best International Film (Foreign Language) Nominated
Boulder International Film Festival Grand Prize Pablo Berger (director), Arcadia Motion Pictures, Noodles Production, and Nix Films Won
Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film 7th Orbit Award Pablo Berger Won

Awards listed on IMdB[6]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]

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Goya Award for Best Film

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Snow White by the Brothers Grimm

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  1. ^ a b Bracco, Diane (2015). "El hechizo de las imágenes: Blancanieves, el cuento espectacular de Pablo Berger (2012)". Fotocinema. Revista científica de cine y fotografía: 27 – via EBSCOhost.
  2. ^ a b Ebert, Roger. "Blancanieves movie review & film summary (2012) | Roger Ebert". https://www.rogerebert.com/. Retrieved 2021-04-12. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  3. ^ Latorre, Jorge. "Pablo Berger's Blancanieves and Modern Spain – Senses of Cinema". Retrieved 2021-04-12.
  4. ^ "Blancanieves-FNAC-Callao-Arcadia-Motion-Pictures-05" by Arcadia Motion Pictures is licensed under CC BY 2.0
  5. ^ ROCHA, E.; BON, O. (2020). Many women, rare women: representations of the feminine in the ads of the 1920s. Federal University of Juiz de Fora: Lumina. pp. 94–111.
  6. ^ Berger, Pablo (2012-09-28), Blancanieves (Drama, Fantasy), Maribel Verdú, Emilio Gavira, Daniel Giménez Cacho, Ángela Molina, Arcadia Motion Pictures, Sisifo Films AIE, Nix Films, retrieved 2021-04-12