Umbracle (1972) - Double Feature

No empty Double Features


Please create a new Double Feature

Create a new Double Feature


This film turns on two basic axes: the inquiry into ways of cinematographic representation and a critical image of official Spain at the time of the Franco dictatorship. “Montage of attractions” and Brechtianism in strong doses. Umbracle is made up of fragments (some are archive footage) that resound rather than progress by unusual links, with dejá vu scenes that promise us more but remain tensely unfinished. Jonathan Rosembaun said: “few directors since Resnais have played so ruthlessly with the unconscious narrative expectations to bug us”. Learning from the feeling of strangeness caused by Rossellini as he threw well known actors into savage scenery in southern Europe. Portabella makes Christopher Lee wander around a dream-like Barcelona. Without a doubt Portabella’s most structurally complex and most profoundly political film, that is ferociously poetic.


Main Cast: Christopher Lee, Jeannine Mestre, Miguel Bilbatúa, Román Gubern, Joan Enric Lahosa, Joan Miró

Director: Pere Portabella

Writers: Pere Portabella, Joan Brossa

Editor: Teresa Alcocer

Cinematographer: Manuel Esteban Marquilles


Sign In to create Double Features

or

Sign Up if you don't have an account already