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CINEMA

Spanish Beatlemania movie wows film fest

A new film about "Beatlemania" under the Franco dictatorship entertained critics at the San Sebastian film festival on Tuesday, recounting how the British band's songs inspired one ordinary Spaniard during dark times.

Spanish Beatlemania movie wows film fest
Lennon really did spend time in Almeria in 1966 acting in the movie "How I Won The War". While there, he wrote the psychedelic classics "Strawberry Fields Forever". Photo:YouTube

"Living Is Easy With Your Eyes Closed" by Spanish director David Trueba tells the story of Antonio San Roman, a small-town schoolmaster who teaches his pupils English by playing them Beatles songs.

When Beatles star John Lennon comes to act in a film being shot in the southern Spanish city of Almeria, the schoolteacher sets out on a road trip, hoping to meet his hero, and picking up two young hitchhikers on the way.

The real-life tale, a fable of rebellion in a socially and sexually repressed Spain, drew laughs and applause from the audience on Tuesday at the San Sebastian Festival, one of Europe's top cinema events.

Spanish director David Trueba (2L) poses with the cast. Photo: Rava Rivas/AFP

Lennon really did spend time in Almeria in 1966, acting there in the movie "How I Won The War".

While there, he wrote one of The Beatles' psychedelic classics, "Strawberry Fields Forever" – although he is said to have taken the title of the song from a place in his native city of Liverpool.

"If one thing inspired me in John Lennon's visit to a country like Spain in the 1960s, it was that he represented the working class of Liverpool and had managed to rise up in a country as class-bound as England," Trueba, 44, told reporters after the screening.

"Just his mere presence in Spain, with what he radiated, in itself generated a kind of revolution and encouraged lots of youngsters."

The film screened in competition for the Golden Shell award, the top gong at the festival in the northern Spanish city, which runs until September 28th.

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FILM

French film club for English speakers returns to cinemas

Lost in Frenchlation, a film club that screens French films with English subtitles in Paris, is returning to cinemas this weekend after holding virtual screenings during lockdown.

French film club for English speakers returns to cinemas
Photo: LOIC VENANCE / AFP

Wednesday saw the reopening of cafés, restaurants, museums, theatres and cinemas in France since October.

This means that Lost in Frenchlation can return to cinemas, and film buffs who struggle to watch French movies without English subtitles can meet up again this weekend at the Luminor Hotel de Ville where the first screening is taking place this Sunday.

READ ALSO: French cinemas face 400-film backlog as they prepare to reopen

What’s on the programme?

The first event taking place on Sunday, May 23rd is a screening of Albert Dupontel’se César awarded film “Adieu les cons” (Bye bye Morons), a comedy drama about a woman who tries to find her long-lost child with a help of a man in the middle of a burnout and a blind archivist.

On Sunday, May 30th there will be a Mother’s Day special screening of “Énorme”, comedy, starring Marina Foïs and Jonathan Cohen, at Club de l’Étoile in the 17th arrondissement in Paris. 

On Saturday, May 22nd, there will be a virtual screening of “Joli Mai” by Chris Marker (1963) which inspired the documentary film Le Joli Mai 2020. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Chris Marker specialist & journalist Jean-Michel Frodon.

Lost in Frenchlation is a company that sets up screenings of recent French film releases with English subtitles to give Paris’s large international community access to French culture and meet others in the same situation.

For more information, check out their website or sign up to their newsletter (link here).

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