A feel-good, compelling Spanish story of a fashion house in Madrid in the late 50's, which is scene to money, fashion, drama, entanglements, love, jealousies, plots, counter-plots involving ... Read allA feel-good, compelling Spanish story of a fashion house in Madrid in the late 50's, which is scene to money, fashion, drama, entanglements, love, jealousies, plots, counter-plots involving its owners, customers and residential employees.A feel-good, compelling Spanish story of a fashion house in Madrid in the late 50's, which is scene to money, fashion, drama, entanglements, love, jealousies, plots, counter-plots involving its owners, customers and residential employees.
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- 6 wins & 18 nominations total
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Very light amusing distraction. Stuff for watching before bed with the wife.
(Avoid the follow-on Velvet Collection - which is trash)
In the same genre - Spanish sloppy stuff - Grand Hotel is better.
In the same genre - Spanish sloppy stuff - Grand Hotel is better.
My wife and myself were hooked watching the series Velvet and staying late every night until we finished the First season. We loved the series and highly recommend it. While watching the series we were pleasantly surprised when we discovered the true story behind the story that, probably, very few people know except, of course, the writers of the series.
All the founders of Velvet, as per the story, came from Cuba from working in a place call "El Encanto" which was, in reality, the queen of all the stores in Havana, Cuba and the Americas in the 50s. My wife and myself are both Cuban, I was born in 1940 and my wife in the 1950, so we knew this store "in person".
"El Encanto" was started by two Spanish immigrants that went to Cuba in the 1880s, last name Solis, as a modest fabrics store. The store grew with the managerial intelligence of the founders and, in spite of all the endemic political problems of Cuba, by the early 50s became what it was, an impressive building six stories high with different departments on each floor and with branches in every big city in the island. On the early 1950s two of the partners went back to Spain and were instrumental in the creation of two stores in Madrid, "Gallerias Preciado" and "El Corte Ingles". We should add "Velvet".
Unfortunately, "El Encanto" was nationalized in 1960 by the communist government of Cuba and in a few months later it was burned down by some ex-employees that prefer a burnt building than the government ownership. (The above data can be verified on numerous articles in the internet and the Wikipedia Encyclopedia, also pictures of the actual store are available.)
All the founders of Velvet, as per the story, came from Cuba from working in a place call "El Encanto" which was, in reality, the queen of all the stores in Havana, Cuba and the Americas in the 50s. My wife and myself are both Cuban, I was born in 1940 and my wife in the 1950, so we knew this store "in person".
"El Encanto" was started by two Spanish immigrants that went to Cuba in the 1880s, last name Solis, as a modest fabrics store. The store grew with the managerial intelligence of the founders and, in spite of all the endemic political problems of Cuba, by the early 50s became what it was, an impressive building six stories high with different departments on each floor and with branches in every big city in the island. On the early 1950s two of the partners went back to Spain and were instrumental in the creation of two stores in Madrid, "Gallerias Preciado" and "El Corte Ingles". We should add "Velvet".
Unfortunately, "El Encanto" was nationalized in 1960 by the communist government of Cuba and in a few months later it was burned down by some ex-employees that prefer a burnt building than the government ownership. (The above data can be verified on numerous articles in the internet and the Wikipedia Encyclopedia, also pictures of the actual store are available.)
SPOILER: The show is visually stunning, characters are interesting (Raul De La Riva for instance) and almost everyone is really good looking. My main beef with the show is that it makes it really hard to empathize with the main characters. The premise is that you root for the lovers who almost never have things going their way (at least for too long). But their actions make it hard to root for them. Alberto marries Christina for her money to keep his store afloat. Christina loves Alberto earnestly, yet he continues his flirtations with Ana and one other woman. He cheats on her and treats her badly. And we're still expected to be on his side. Ana is too 'principled' to marry Alberto in a secret ceremony but has no qualms hanging around with a married man, while befriending his unsuspecting wife. It's all a bit hard to reconcile. The characters being 'flawed' is not the problem here, it's that the show carries on strongly making the assumption that you're on their side despite their actions. I personally struggled with forgiving them for their actions and wishing them to be united in spite of all the people they hurt along the way (in many cases unnecessarily and selfishly). Yet they are portrayed as being 'golden'.
The visual content of this series is superb. The fashion, architecture, cars are evocative of the period the series takes place in. The formal mannerisms, impeccable clothing, beautifully curated dresses and accessories lend an elegant high end look to the production. The wonderful regional Spanish accent imbues the dialog with a true time and place.
Even though the arc of the storyline is well thought out and the intrigue well peppered throughout, the main love story falls flat for me. You want to reach in and slap Ana and Alberto and tell them to get some balls and act like adults. This is especially true of Alberto. He seems childish emotionally but the series makes you believe that he is an accomplished person without really giving the audience a way to reconcile the two.
Some of the minor love stories work better. They come and go, ebb and flow to keep the story moving. They can be funny and sweet even if frustrating at times.
Beautiful, yes. Outstanding, it could be; but it falls short because of the relationship of the main characters.
Even though the arc of the storyline is well thought out and the intrigue well peppered throughout, the main love story falls flat for me. You want to reach in and slap Ana and Alberto and tell them to get some balls and act like adults. This is especially true of Alberto. He seems childish emotionally but the series makes you believe that he is an accomplished person without really giving the audience a way to reconcile the two.
Some of the minor love stories work better. They come and go, ebb and flow to keep the story moving. They can be funny and sweet even if frustrating at times.
Beautiful, yes. Outstanding, it could be; but it falls short because of the relationship of the main characters.
Loved this series. I could not stop watching it. kudos to the writers and cast. Thanks for the entertainment.
Did you know
- TriviaAfter shooting a couple of episodes of the show's second season to bank them, production was held for a while so Miguel Ángel Silvestre could go work on Sense8 (2015).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Paquita Salas: La actriz 360 (2016)
- SoundtracksFalling in Love
Performed by Alba Llibre
- How many seasons does Velvet have?Powered by Alexa
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- 絲絨之戀
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