[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendario de lanzamientosLas 250 mejores películasPelículas más popularesExplorar películas por géneroTaquilla superiorHorarios y ticketsNoticias sobre películasNoticias destacadas sobre películas de la India
    Qué hay en la TV y en streamingLas 250 mejores seriesProgramas de televisión más popularesExplorar series por géneroNoticias de TV
    ¿Qué verÚltimos tráileresOriginales de IMDbSelecciones de IMDbDestacado de IMDbGuía de entretenimiento familiarPodcasts de IMDb
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalPremios STARmeterCentral de premiosCentral de festivalesTodos los eventos
    Personas nacidas hoyCelebridades más popularesNoticias de famosos
    Centro de ayudaZona de colaboradoresEncuestas
Para profesionales de la industria
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de seguimiento
Iniciar sesión
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar la aplicación
  • Reparto y equipo
  • Reseñas de usuarios
  • Curiosidades
  • Preguntas frecuentes
IMDbPro

Carmen

  • 1983
  • A
  • 1h 42min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,4/10
3,7 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Antonio Gades and Laura del Sol in Carmen (1983)
DramaMúsicaRomance

Un ballet flamenco prepara una versión del drama de Prosper Merimee. Antonio, el coreógrafo, se enamora de Carmen, la bailarina principal, y su historia se vuelve un reflejo de la obra.Un ballet flamenco prepara una versión del drama de Prosper Merimee. Antonio, el coreógrafo, se enamora de Carmen, la bailarina principal, y su historia se vuelve un reflejo de la obra.Un ballet flamenco prepara una versión del drama de Prosper Merimee. Antonio, el coreógrafo, se enamora de Carmen, la bailarina principal, y su historia se vuelve un reflejo de la obra.

  • Dirección
    • Carlos Saura
  • Guión
    • Prosper Mérimée
    • Carlos Saura
    • Antonio Gades
  • Reparto principal
    • Antonio Gades
    • Laura del Sol
    • Paco de Lucía
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,4/10
    3,7 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Carlos Saura
    • Guión
      • Prosper Mérimée
      • Carlos Saura
      • Antonio Gades
    • Reparto principal
      • Antonio Gades
      • Laura del Sol
      • Paco de Lucía
    • 27Reseñas de usuarios
    • 22Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
      • 9 premios y 10 nominaciones en total

    Imágenes23

    Ver cartel
    Ver cartel
    Ver cartel
    Ver cartel
    Ver cartel
    + 18
    Ver cartel

    Reparto principal55

    Editar
    Antonio Gades
    Antonio Gades
    • Antonio
    Laura del Sol
    • Carmen
    Paco de Lucía
    Paco de Lucía
    • Paco
    Marisol
    Marisol
    • Pepa Flores
    • (as Pepa Flores)
    Cristina Hoyos
    Cristina Hoyos
    • Cristina
    Juan Antonio Jiménez
    • Juan
    José Yepes
    • Pepe Girón
    Sebastián Moreno
    • Escamillo
    Gómez de Jerez
    • Cantaores
    Manolo Sevilla
    • Cantaores
    Antonio Solera
    • Guitarristes
    Manuel Rodríguez
    • Guitarrista
    Lorenzo Virseda
    • Guitarristes
    M. Magdalena
    • Artistas invitados
    La Bronce
    • Artistas invitados
    El Fati
    • Artistas invitados
    Enrique Ortega
    • Artistas invitados
    Diego Pantoja
    • Artistas invitados
    • Dirección
      • Carlos Saura
    • Guión
      • Prosper Mérimée
      • Carlos Saura
      • Antonio Gades
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios27

    7,43.7K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Reseñas destacadas

    10Galina_movie_fan

    Saura/Gades' " Carmen" is the most sensual of all adaptations and truly Spanish

    Passionate, dramatic, riveting as Flamenco itself, the film is simply amazing. It is set on the immortal Bizet's music. The original music is written and performed by one of the greatest classical guitarists, leading proponent of the Modern Flamenco style, Paco de Lucia who plays a musician with the same name. Legendary Flamenco dancer and choreographer Antonio Gades co/wrote the script and choreographed this fabulous version of the celebrated Georges Bizet/Prosper Mérimée novella/opera. He plays a main character Antonio, the famous dancer/choreographer who works on retelling the story of Carmen in the Flamenco style that combines dances with singing and rhythmic hand clapping and has a highly charged level of dynamics that appeals enormously to the viewers.

    Brilliant and graceful Cristina Hoyos whose technical excellence matches the elegant artistry of her dancing shines in the supporting role. Hoyos had been the first dancer in Gades' company for twenty years (1968-1988) and she was the protagonist of three films that Carlos Saura made of Gades' three great shows: "Bodas de Sangre" (1978), "Carmen" (1983) and "El Amor Brujo" (1985). Gorgeous Laura del Sol is a young dancer named Carmen in whom Antony sees from the first sight another Carmen, who was immortalized by two Frenchmen, the writer Prosper Mérimée in his most famous novella written in 1846 that had inspired George Bizet's world famous Opéra-Comique version from 1875.

    As in the opera and in the novella, Carmen in Saura's film is desirable and deadly, the ultimate femme fatale who has to be free above anything else. She could not tolerate the possessive love of any man and would prefer death to submission. There some 50 movie adaptations of the story and the opera to the screen, and as different as they are, they all have in common the only possible tragic end. Saura/Gades' film is unique as the most sensual of all and truly Spanish. I fell in love with it from the first time I saw it over twenty years ago and it is as special and beautiful today as it was back then. Highly recommended.
    8evso

    well done

    This is one of the best films we watched in my high school Spanish class. If you are a fan of the opera, this film will strongly entertain you. Of course, the dancing is wonderful. Watching these amazing dancers moving to the music of Bizet is well worth checking out.
    bogyo-3

    wonderful, passionate film

    This is a wonderful film! Full of passion, music and drama. It follows the story of the opera of the same name. Even Carmen-haters will agree that this is a version that overcomes the boredom bred of familiarity and infuses new life into this overproduced work.

    The setting is a flamenco school in Spain, and the search is on for the star of a production of a flamenco Carmen. The director finds, and then falls in love with his new leading lady. The complications arise from there, from some unhappiness on the part of the best dancer in the troupe who feels she should be the star and not the newcomer, and from the storyline of the opera.

    The director of the film is the real-life director of one of the most famous dance schools in Spain, and the dancers, except for the character of Carmen, are members of the school.

    The dancing is exciting and dangerous, the story, though very familiar, attains fresh vigor in the new setting, and is altogether one of the best films of the eighties.
    stryker-5

    "Ojos De Gitana, Ojos De Lobo"

    Filmed in Spain by Spaniards, this is a Spanish tale based on a French novel and the French opera which it inspired. Saura's flamenco "Carmen" is an exciting work of art.

    A modern ensemble of musicians and dancers is rehearsing a flamenco interpretation of the Carmen story. The producer and star dancer is Antonio (Antonio Gades). The setting appears to be suburban Madrid, but we see so little of the world outside the rehearsal room that it hardly matters. Antonio has done his research, and has become obsessed with the Carmen legend. He chooses a girl named Carmen to play 'his' Carmen, and life begins tragically to imitate art ...

    The opening credits are backed by Dore prints with Bizet playing. This is clearly going to be a production which makes clever use of the many-layered Carmen myth. And so it proves. Antonio pores over his copy of Merimee, and as a knot of singers and guitarists breaks into an improvised buleria, we hear Bizet jarringly overlaid. Antonio is being pulled in two directions, simultaneously possessed by the duende of authentic flamenco and lured by the bewitching Carmen of 19th-century romanticism. One current, the flamenco, is spontaneous and natural, the other is unSpanish and highly theatrical. Both are warring and fermenting within Antonio's psyche.

    Cats don't come when you call them, observes Antonio, and they come when you don't call. Herein is the essence of Carmen's wild character. Antonio has Cristina as his senior dancer (the marvellous Cristina Hoyos), but as he tells her, good though she is, she is not 'the' Carmen. He travels to Seville (where else?) in search of his ideal, and there he finds his leading lady - and his nemesis. The young gypsy beauty scrambles into the dance class late, her unruly dignity immediately apparent, and we see in Antonio's face that he knows. This is 'his' Carmen.

    The film's artistic conceit is a subtle movement between actuality and fantasy, echoing the conflict between the truth of flamenco and the falseness of the Bizet Carmen. Are Cristina and Carmen at each other's throats in real life, or is this Antonio's heated imagination expanding on the Tabacalera clash? Is the Habanera scene a straightforward rehearsal, or Antonio's reverie? Does Carmen really appear wearing the high comb and mantilla, or has Antonio succumbed to the myth?

    Antonio 'sculpts' Carmen, teaching the youngster how to dance, and how to feel the dance. He pushes her hard and makes enormous physical demands of her, yet from the first cigarette the dynamics are established - Carmen is unknowable, untameable. Antonio will end by destroying his creation. He is Don Jose, and he can't help it.

    In this deeply attractive film, some scenes transcend even the excellent norm. Such a scene is the Tabacalera number. The women pound the tables in a flamenco rhythm as they sing the haunting "Don't Go Near The Brambles". The hostility between Cristina and Carmen boils over into violence, faithfully reproducing Merimee and Bizet, and all portrayed in dance. As Antonio arrives in the role of Don Jose to arrest the gypsy wildcat, Bizet's tragic motif begins to play.

    Carmen and Antonio drink a glass of manzanilla together, symbolically cementing their relationship. At her bidding, Antonio dances the Farruca, the 'baile jondo', the key which unlocks the secret of flamenco. Aroused, Carmen joins in, and the dance (always a metaphor for copulation) merges into actual lovemaking. But delight is followed by disappointment. At 2am, Antonio wakes to find Carmen grabbing her clothes and slipping away. It is futile to ask why. She is Carmen.

    Antonio dances alone in the rehearsal room. The room's stark cuboid, with its whole-wall mirror, makes an interesting contrast with his fluid, mobile form. Does dancing help him think? Do his thoughts inspire his dance? The image of a man moving beautifully in a bare box of a room is one of the film's quiet triumphs.

    At this crucial point in their blossoming love affair, Carmen and Antonio begin to take divergent paths. This is intelligently depicted by the use of parallel scenes. Antonio sweeps open the drapes to let in the first light of a new day while, somewhere else, electronic grilles part in a parody of Antonio's curtains to admit Carmen to a prison. She is visiting the jailbird husband whom she doesn't love. Antonio has grown emotionally: Carmen is a low-life hustler incapable of change. In a Christ-like gesture, Antonio drinks a solitary glass of manzanilla, the cup of the passion which will not pass him by.

    The best scene of the film, straddling reality and fantasy, ordinariness and high artifice, dance and dialogue, is the poker game. The jailbird Jose Fernandez has left prison and joined the troupe. There is a powerful flamenco dance in which Antonio and the gitano confront each other and fight. Afterwards, as he gets up from the floor, Jose removes his wig and others gather round, solicitous for his well-being. Once more, the film has drawn us into an emotional conflict, only to strip away the illusion.

    Other treasures abound. The corrida is lovingly depicted in mock-dance, with balletic veronicas and a silent faena: then there is the 'dance-off' between a jealous Antonio and an imperious Carmen, with their contrasting rhythmic signatures: and the squalor of betrayal and abuse in which the story culminates. The presence of Paco de Lucia, legendary guitarist and the scion of a great flamenco dynasty, is in itself a certificate of the film's artistic authenticity.

    Verdict - a superb, unfussy modern work which captures the strong flavour of this ancient Spanish folk-art on film.
    10namdc

    You don't need to love opera or flamenco(I don't)to be captured, enraptured, enthralled by this film

    This is an amazing film, both for the incredibly energy evoked from the frenetic flamenco dancing, and from the unique way that the filmmakers interweave the story of the stage production with the lives of the characters preparing for it. Spellbinding is the only word I can use to describe the experience. This is not 'Bizet's Carmen' by any usual standard. This is not a usual film by any standard. Every nuanced glance, every stomp of the foot, every piece of the music is intertwined so captivatingly that you can't take your eyes off the screen. You don't need to love opera or flamenco(I don't)to be captured, enraptured, enthralled by this film. Subtle and direct; loud and still; One of, if not the best, movies of it's kind, because there are so few like it.

    Más del estilo

    Bodas de sangre
    7,4
    Bodas de sangre
    Elisa, vida mía
    7,3
    Elisa, vida mía
    La caza
    7,5
    La caza
    Peppermint frappé
    7,1
    Peppermint frappé
    Cría cuervos...
    7,9
    Cría cuervos...
    Ana y los lobos
    7,3
    Ana y los lobos
    Deprisa, deprisa
    7,0
    Deprisa, deprisa
    La prima Angélica
    7,3
    La prima Angélica
    Tango
    6,9
    Tango
    El amor brujo
    6,9
    El amor brujo
    Carmen de Bizet
    7,4
    Carmen de Bizet
    Flamenco
    7,4
    Flamenco

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The film is the second part of Carlos Saura's "Flamenco Trilogy". The first was Bodas de sangre (1981) whilst the third was El amor brujo (1986).
    • Conexiones
      Featured in At the Movies: Heart Like a Wheel/The Buddy System/La Balance/Carmen/Lonely Hearts (1984)
    • Banda sonora
      Carmen
      Music by Georges Bizet

      Conducted by Thomas Schippers

      Performed by Regina Resnik (Carmen), Mario Del Monaco (Don José), Tom Krause (Escamillo)

      Courtesy by Decca London St 259 - 8

    Selecciones populares

    Inicia sesión para calificar y añadir a tu lista para recibir recomendaciones personalizadas
    Iniciar sesión

    Preguntas frecuentes15

    • How long is Carmen?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 2 de mayo de 1983 (España)
    • País de origen
      • España
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Español
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Carmen: Inspirada en la novela de Merimée y la ópera de Bizet
    • Empresas productoras
      • Emiliano Piedra
      • Televisión Española (TVE)
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 42min(102 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

    Contribuir a esta página

    Sugerir un cambio o añadir el contenido que falta
    • Más información acerca de cómo contribuir
    Editar página

    Más por descubrir

    Visto recientemente

    Habilita las cookies del navegador para usar esta función. Más información.
    Obtener la aplicación IMDb
    Inicia sesión para tener más accesoInicia sesión para tener más acceso
    Sigue a IMDb en las redes sociales
    Obtener la aplicación IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtener la aplicación IMDb
    • Ayuda
    • Índice del sitio
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Licencia de datos de IMDb
    • Sala de prensa
    • Anuncios
    • Empleos
    • Condiciones de uso
    • Política de privacidad
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, una empresa de Amazon

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.