Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Eloy de la Iglesia (1 January 1944 – 23 March 2006) was a Spanish screenwriter and film director. De la Iglesia was an outspoken gay and socialist filmmaker who is relatively unknown outside Spain despite a prolific and successful career in his native country.

  2. Spanish movies director. He studied cinema in Paris at the IDHEC. He began working in cinema in 1966, though he became famous in the years of the spanish transition to the democracy with provoking films. Drugs, delinquence, terrorism and generational problems are the common subjects in his films.

  3. Eloy Germán de la Iglesia Diéguez ( Zarauz, Guipúzcoa, 1 de enero de 1944 - Madrid, 23 de marzo de 2006), 1 conocido artísticamente como Eloy de la Iglesia, fue un director de cine y guionista español. Su trayectoria como director comenzó a mediados de los años 1960 prolongándose hasta 2003.

  4. Aug 26, 2021 · Spanish filmmaker Eloy de la Iglesia used genre entertainment to take on the fascist ideologies that enshrined family, church, and state.

  5. De la Iglesia was an outspoken gay socialist filmmaker who is relatively unknown outside Spain despite a prolific and successful career in his native country. He is best remembered for having portrayed urban marginality and the world of drugs and juvenile delinquency in the early 1980s.

  6. Oct 6, 2021 · Severin introduces the work of Eloy de la Iglesia, a little-known Basque filmmaker with three releases spanning the period from the end of the Franco regime to the transition to democracy in Spain.

  7. Eloy de la Iglesia. Writer: Bulgarian Lovers. Spanish movies director. He studied cinema in Paris at the IDHEC. He began working in cinema in 1966, though he became famous in the years of the spanish transition to the democracy with provoking films. Drugs, delinquence, terrorism and generational problems are the common subjects in his films.