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IMDbPro

L'amour sorcier

Original title: El amor brujo
  • 1986
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Antonio Gades, Cristina Hoyos, and Laura del Sol in L'amour sorcier (1986)
DramaMusic

In a Gypsy village, the fathers of Candela and José promise their children to each other. Years later, the unfaithful José marries Candela but while defending his lover Lucía in a brawl, he ... Read allIn a Gypsy village, the fathers of Candela and José promise their children to each other. Years later, the unfaithful José marries Candela but while defending his lover Lucía in a brawl, he is stabbed to death. Carmelo, who secretly loves Candela since he was a boy, is arrested w... Read allIn a Gypsy village, the fathers of Candela and José promise their children to each other. Years later, the unfaithful José marries Candela but while defending his lover Lucía in a brawl, he is stabbed to death. Carmelo, who secretly loves Candela since he was a boy, is arrested while helping José and unfairly sent to prison. Four years later he is released and declare... Read all

  • Director
    • Carlos Saura
  • Writers
    • Gregorio Martínez Sierra
    • Carlos Saura
    • Antonio Gades
  • Stars
    • Antonio Gades
    • Cristina Hoyos
    • Laura del Sol
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carlos Saura
    • Writers
      • Gregorio Martínez Sierra
      • Carlos Saura
      • Antonio Gades
    • Stars
      • Antonio Gades
      • Cristina Hoyos
      • Laura del Sol
    • 9User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos3

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    Top cast79

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    Antonio Gades
    Antonio Gades
    • Carmelo
    Cristina Hoyos
    Cristina Hoyos
    • Candela
    Laura del Sol
    • Lucía
    Juan Antonio Jiménez
    • José
    • (as Juan Antonio Jimenez)
    Emma Penella
    Emma Penella
    • Tía Rosario
    La Polaca
    La Polaca
    • Pastora
    Gómez de Jerez
    • El Lobo
    • (as Gomez de Jerez)
    • …
    Enrique Ortega
    • Padre de José
    Diego Pantoja
    • Padre de Candela
    Giovana
    • Rocío
    Maria Campano
      Candy Román
      • Chulo
      • (as Candy Roman)
      Enrique Pantoja
      Manolo Sevilla
      • Cantaor
      Antonio Solera
      • Guitarrista
      Manuel Rodríguez
      • Guitarrista
      • (as Manuel Rodriguez)
      Juan Manuel Roldán
      • Guitarrista
      • (as Juan Manuel Roldan)
      José Luis Luna
      • Bailarín
      • (as José Luis Luna Tauro)
      • Director
        • Carlos Saura
      • Writers
        • Gregorio Martínez Sierra
        • Carlos Saura
        • Antonio Gades
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews9

      6.91K
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      Featured reviews

      7ma-cortes

      Tragic and sensitive love story , stunningly danced , dealing with a woman is cursed by a bewitched love

      This is the story of an Andalusian gypsy woman called Candela (Cristina Hoyos) living in Cadiz slums . It regards a haunted young girl being mysteriously harassed by his ex-husband Jose (Juan Antonio Jiménez) and every night she goes to the place where his old lover died to dance with his ghost . It starts with a bloody confrontation between a violent man and a passionate gypsy , both of whom are dueling for the heart of a pretty young girl , Lucia (Laura Del Sol) , Jose's lover . As Jose has dead in a razor fighting , although Candela affection goes on . The Jose's ghost is still obsessed with Candela's soul . Carmelo (Antonio Gades) is accused of killing , subsequently imprisoned and years later he is released and then declares his love for Candela. However, the woman goes on cursed by the bewitched love and every night she goes to the place where José died to dance with his ghost.

      This is the exciting story about two men confront for the heart of the same woman . Having been based on a ballet, the movie does use dance extensively , particularly in some rather striking and eerie dream sequences . The movie version appears partially to modify this plot, largely removing the ghost angle and turning the story into two lovers, one good and one evil, competing for the same woman. Movie is based on a ballet and music by prestigious Manuel De Falla concerning a woman in an arranged marriage who loves another man . When her husband dies , she thinks she's free to pursue her true love, but the husband's ghost refuses to let her go, and she must find a way to get rid of him to win her true love . However, the ghost angle does not appear to have been jettisoned completely ; at the beginning of the movie, she thinks her husband is dead and that his reappearance is that of a ghost. There are other two versions about this play : 1949 Bewitched Love by Antonio Roman with Ana Esmeralda, Manuel Aguilera , Miguel Albaicín , Elena Barrios and 1967 by Francisco Rovira Veleta with Antonio Gades , La Polaca , Rafael de Córdoba.

      It is directed with a striking visual sense and very well acted. So it's definitely a more cultured affair than most of the Spanish movies. It is fundamentally a tragic melodrama with ballet scenes , that's why it is musically riveting , it is almost, also , perfect and laced with glimmer photography , particularly shown on the spectacular and sensitive dancing set pieces . I was able to enjoy many of the visual elements, in fact this one results to be the quintaessential Dance film , featuring brilliant and frenetic choreography and embellished thanks to its chromatic aesthetic and a high-caliber Flamenco score , including songs sung by the greatest : Rocio Jurado , adding sensual re-creations of love , passion , betrayal , and jealousy . Freely based on ¨El amor brujo¨ , as the film filled out the story with spoken dialogue , but nevertheless used the entire score of the ballet , along with additional songs and dances performed by characters in the film. El Amor Brujo (Love, the Magician, literally, Spell-bound Love or The Bewitched Love, sometimes translated as Wedded by Witchcraft) is a ballet composed in 1914-15 by Manuel de Falla to a libretto by Gregorio Martínez Sierra . In 1916, Falla arranged a rendition of the work for sextet and small orchestra and the following year he made a concert version, also for small orchestra . Later, he fashioned a piano suite from it and finally , a second ballet version (1925) that features expanded orchestration, elimination of the narration, small cuts and plot changes, and a different order to the numbers . The work is distinctively Andalusian in character with the songs in the Andalusian Spanish dialect of the Gypsies. The music contains moments of remarkable beauty and originality ; it includes the celebrated "Danza ritual del fuego" (Ritual Fire Dance), "Canción del fuego fatuo" (Song of Wildfire), and the "Danza del terror" (Dance of Terror) . As the entire location knows about the haunting , but still brands Candela as crazy because she dances every night with her husband's ghost ("Danza del terror") . Candela, now a widow, is free to establish a relationship with Carmelo, but continues to be haunted by her husband's ghost . As Candela gets advice that a ritual dance is necessary to cast the ghost off ("Danza ritual del fuego"), but it does not work . The great quartet starring formed by four splendid dancers : Antonio Gades , Cristina Hoyos ,Juan Antonio Jiménez , and Laura del Sol are really fabulous .This splendid motion picture was compellingly directed by Carlos Saura.
      8howard.schumann

      Captures the dark mood of the gypsy world

      Impeccably choreographed and imaginatively stylized, El Amor Brujo, the final film in Carlos Saura's Flamenco Trilogy, stands out for the brilliance in which it captures the dark mood of the gypsy world through sensual flamenco dance. The film features the complete score of Manuel de Falla's ballet including the famous Ritual Fire Dance, Cancion del Fuego Fatuo, and the Dance of Terror. It is also enhanced by additional gypsy songs in the Andalusian dialect performed by characters in the movie. Set on an elaborate stage representation of an Andalusian shantytown, Saura brings back the cast from Carmen in much different roles but still choreographed by Gades.

      The film tells the story of bewitched lovers, reaching each other through the veil of death. The opening shot provides a panoramic view of the sound stage with the sky a mélange of changing colors to fit the mood. Candela (Christina Hoyos) and José (Juan Antonio Jimenez) are promised to each other by their fathers when they are children, illustrating the stifling rituals of the gypsy village and presaging the inevitable struggle of the partners to escape their spiritual bonds and reach towards a full expression of their human spirit. When they reach the age of maturity, their wedding, memorably portrayed in song while the bride and groom are lifted to the top of the chorus, we find out that their celebration also has its shadow.

      Carmelo (Gades) has always been in love with Candela and José has been lovers with Lucia (Laura del Sol). When José is killed in a knife fight after a visit with Lucia, Carmelo is unjustly arrested and sent to prison. When the narrative resumes, it is four years later and Carmel has just been released from prison. Still in love with the now widowed Candela, his courtship is thwarted by his lover's nightly meeting with José's spirit on the site in which he was killed where she dances with him in a ritual totentanz. When Candela discovers that her husband was unfaithful to her, she asks Carmelo to free her from her haunted meetings and show her the way to the free expression of her passion.

      When he visits a village elder and is told "My son, the happiness of some always comes at the expense of others." he knows the direction in which he has to proceed. El Amor Brujo is stunning in the other-worldly mood it engenders but does not recreate the magic of Carmen. Its story, which I found otherwise involving, is extended beyond a satisfactory length, and the lead performers seem too old for their roles. Their dancing, however, is as magnificent as ever and alone makes the film a memorable experience.
      10aberlour36

      A stunning film

      This is a brilliant film, one of Carlos Saura's best. It is essentially a ballet, laced with gorgeous music and moving photography. I've seen it three times and have enjoyed it more each time.

      This isn't a teen flick, of course, and will not appeal to everyone. But for people serious about music, dance, and drama, this shouldn't be missed.
      10mccolley2

      Setting the record straight

      Formalismo, that school of Hispanic literature that emphasizes form as function, or form over function, has little to do with Saura's EL AMOR BRUJO. This is Saura's final work in his flamenco trilogy that began with BODAS de SANGRE and includes CARMEN. As with those two films, Saura bases this cinematic ballet on a previous work, Manuel de Falla's EL AMOR BRUJO. The other two films in the trilogy were based on Lorca's BODAS de SANGRE and Merimee's and Bizet's novel and opera, CARMEN. These three classical works are not examples of formalismo. Rather, they are prime examples of both the realistic and impressionistic schools of literature which under the creative mastery of Saura become sensual re-creations of love, passion, betrayal, and death. The love stories here supercede form and attain a thematic content worthy of the great literary works they portray. The starkness of the set is for symbolic purposes and not for form nor for function. The dilapidated, dusty set represents the emptiness of the soul that has lost great love, or has been deceived by a bewitching love. The set takes on color when Candela dances the Fire Dance, and again at the end when Lucia sacrifices herself to be the eternal lover of the bewitching ghost of Jose, thus setting Candela free from his cursed memory. Saura never lets us forget the tension between reality and fiction as the dawn rises on a new day over a theatrical set free of obsessions with death and love that bewitches the lover.
      10aciolino

      What great films "should" be...and rarely are

      As an avid fan of classical music, ballet, opera, I am, more often than not, confounded by the poor quality of films based on these genres. If they're not "dumbed down," they are "interpreted," beyond recognition, or simply a vehicle for the director to shout: "look at me! I'm DIRECTING!"

      But Carlos Saura has placed the story (full of passion, fire, lust, longing, love, sin and redemption) well ahead of his own ego. He simply allows the story to be told through dance, music and sparse dialogue.

      Add to this the quality and nature of the choreography where again, we are simply allowed to experience the story: the dance, and its appropriateness to the subject matter tells us all.

      Musically, it is almost, also, perfect. My one reservation lay in some acoustically "awkward" moments that render de Falla's critical orchestration less effective. I will not name them, in the hopes that the reader will not notice them and therefore, not be disappointed.

      Nevertheless, the music is brilliant, and these three elements of form work together for a powerful, moving, and thrilling experience. As music with dance creates an experience that is more than both, this creation is much more than a film.

      See it with a loved one. Or alone at night with a glass of Fundador...

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Quotes

        Padre de José: [Sitting and drinking wine with his friend Diego, looking at the children playing in the street] How your daughter has grown, Diego!

        Padre de Candela: [Turns to ponder the sight of his daughter playing jump-rope in the street, then turns to his friend] My friend, Candela will belong to your José.

        Padre de José: As you wish... Let's seal the pact.

        Padre de Candela: May it be for the best.

        Padre de José: [They shake hands, and one of them pours some wine over their clasped hands] To our children.

      • Connections
        Follows Noces de sang (1981)
      • Soundtracks
        El amor brujo
        Music by Manuel de Falla

        Lyrics by Gregorio Martínez Sierra

        Performed by Rocío Jurado and Orquesta Nacional Española (as Orquesta Nacional de España)

        Conducted by Jesús López Cobos

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      FAQ14

      • How long is Love, the Magician?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • August 27, 1986 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • Spain
      • Official site
        • Official site
      • Language
        • Spanish
      • Also known as
        • Carlos Saura Dance Trilogy, Part 3: El Amor Brujo
      • Production company
        • Emiliano Piedra
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 40 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby
        • 4-Track Stereo
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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