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SPANISH CINEMA

12 of the best Spanish horror films to terrify you this Halloween

Looking for something to give you goosebumps this Halloween? We've broken down some of the best Spanish films that are sure to have you cowering beneath the covers.

best spanish horror films
Pan's Labyrinth is one of the best Spanish horror movies you can watch this Halloween.

1. Pan’s Labyrinth (El Laberinto del Fauno)

best spanish horror films

All at once enchanting, disturbing and hauntingly beautiful, this dark fantasy film by Mexican director Guillermo del Toro takes place during an equally dark time: Francoist Spain in 1944. A young girl escapes from her grim reality by following a mythical faun. 

2. [REC] 

best spanish horror films
 
If this Spanish film seems a bit familiar, that’s because it’s the eerie inspiration of the US film Quarantine. Using the ‘shaky camera’ technique beloved by films like The Blair Witch Project, it tells the story of a TV reporter and cameraman as they follow emergency workers to record a terrifying night of news footage. There has since been Rec 2, 3 and 4, none of which were as widely acclaimed.
 
 
3. Julia’s Eyes (Los Ojos de Julia)
 
best spanish horror films
 
One of several films on this list directed by Guillermo Del Toro, Julia’s Eyes tells the tale of a woman who starts to lose her vision while trying to get to the bottom of the suspicious suicide of her twin sister.
 
 
4. The Devil’s Backbone (El Espinazo del Diablo)
 
best spanish horror films
 
Guillermo Del Toro’s The Devil’s Backbone is supposed to be the “spiritual” predecessor of Pan’s Labyrinth. During the Spanish Civil War, a boy discovers that the orphanage where he lives is haunted by something ominous. 
 
 
5. The Others (Los Otros)
 
best spanish horror films
 
This Spanish-American film by Alejandro Amenábar is a ghost story unlike any other. After the end of the Second World War, a mother (played by Nicole Kidman) and her children start to witness ghostly encounters in their family home.
 
 
6. The Day of the Beast (El Día de la Bestia)
 
best spanish horror films
 
The Day of the Beast is a dark comedy directed by Alex de la Iglesia which follows a Catholic priest determined to commit as many sins as possible so that he may sell his soul and then kill the Antichrist as soon as it is born.
 
 
 
7. Thesis (Tesis)
 
best spanish horror films
 
Another Amenábar film, Thesis has as its protagonist a young woman writing a thesis about violence. When she finds a video of a girl being tortured to death, she discovers the tape’s origin is much closer to her than she thinks.
 
 
8. The Orphanage (El Orfanato)
 
best spanish horror films
 
This movie by first-time Spanish director J.A Bayona is set in an orphanage and takes haunted house films to another, disturbing level. A woman buys the old orphanage where she spent her childhood. But when her adopted son goes missing, she finds that the home has dark secrets around every corner.
 
 
 
9. Sleep Tight (Mientras duermes)
 
best spanish horror films
 
This 2011 psychological thriller directed by Jaume Balagueró will have you hiding behind the sofa. Apartment concierge Cesar (Luis Tosar) believes he was born without the ability to be happy. As a result, he decides his mission is to make life hell for everyone around him and goes to creepy extremes to bring down Clara (Marta Etura), a tenant in the building.  

10. Tombs of the blind dead (La Noche del Terror Ciego

best spanish horror films

Tombs of the Blind Dead (1971) was written and directed by Amando de Ossorio is the first in the iconic Blind Dead series. Its success helped kickstart the Spanish horror film boom of the early seventies.
 
 
11. Darkness (Oscuridad)
 
best spanish horror films
 
Another creepy classic from Jaume Balagueró, this 2002 horror about a family moving into a haunted house will have you hiding behind the sofa. Just don’t watch it when you are home alone.
 
 
12. The Skin I Live In (La Piel que Habito)
 
best spanish horror films
 
What list about Spanish films would be complete without a masterpiece by Pedro Almodóvar? A rare foray in the horror genre for Spain’s most acclaimed director, it stars Antonio Banderas as a plastic surgeon experimenting on a young woman in a bid to develop artificial skin will make your flesh crawl.
 
 
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CULTURE

Why does Spain dub every foreign film and TV series?

Spaniards rarely watch anything foreign in its original language, and the country's cultural obsession with dubbing almost every single non-Spanish language film and TV series has roots in history and business.

Why does Spain dub every foreign film and TV series?

If you live in Spain, or have even flicked through the TV channels in a hotel, you might have noticed that almost every single foreign TV series and film is dubbed.

It’s so common in fact that American director Paul Thomas Anderson once said of Spain: “Spain is the worst place for arthouse cinema; the dubbing is ridiculous.”

It’s fair to say that Spaniards very rarely watch anything in its original language. Some say it’s sheer laziness as they can’t be bothered to read the subtitles, whereas others point to the dubbing obsession as one of the underlying reasons for Spain’s low level of English compared to other countries.

READ ALSO: Why are the Spanish ‘so bad’ at speaking English?

There is a paradox here. While roughly one in four Spaniards claim to be fluent in English, just 4 percent of Spaniards who go to the cinema choose to watch the original version with subtitles, according to Las Provincias.

So, why does Spain dub everything?

History

When sound films arrived in Spain at the beginning of the 20th century, films were dubbed for two reasons. Firstly, so that they could be understood by viewers because so few would understand the original language, but also due to the low levels of literacy in Spain at the time meant that subtitles wouldn’t have been much use anyway.

A few decades later, during the early stages of the Franco dictatorship, it was compulsory for all films to be dubbed into Spanish. The Language Defence Law, introduced in 1941, was used to strengthen Spanish nationalism by promoting Castilian Spanish through a mass cultural mode like cinema.

But it was also a form of censorship because it could alter or ignore entirely themes or comments that were deemed undesirable by the Franco regime. Perhaps the most famous example of this was in the classic film Casablanca. It was widely known that the character played by Humphrey Bogart fought in the Spanish Civil War as part of the International Brigades, in other words, as a Republican against the Franco regime, yet this fact was not included in the dubbed version shown in Spain.

READ ALSO: 17 hilarious Spanish translations of famous English movie titles

Spanish Dictator Francisco Franco was a film buff who watched foreign movies that were censored for the rest of the population. (Photo by AFP)
 

Money talks

Spain’s dubbing habits also have a financial explanation. Dubbing an entire film or TV series is a costly process. As such,  it is only profitable to dub a film if it has a wide distribution market with millions of potential viewers.

This is why dubbing of films is common in Spain and in countries such as France and Russia, while in Scandinavian and Eastern European countries, due to the smaller number of native speakers, films and series are broadcast in their original version and subtitled.

According to figures from the Federation of Spanish Cinemas (FECE) from 2015, of the roughly 3,500 large screen cinemas in Spain, barely 200 of them showed international films in their original language.

Of the 94 million Spanish moviegoers that year, only 3.8 million went to original language screenings, and they took in 24.5 of the €572 million taken at the box office.

Hollywood star Tom Cruise at the premiere in Seville of his 2010 film “Knight and Day”, which in Spanish was titled “Noche y Día”, missing the play on words.(Photo by Jorge Guerrero / AFP)
 

Are Spaniards missing out?

Dubbing, no matter how professionally it is done, will always lose nuance, miss puns, intonations and meanings only possible in the original version. Experts say that due to the long developed dubbing industry in Spain, the quality of dubbed films is high, yet it is undeniable that artistically speaking dubbed films lose something.

READ ALSO: Boogie noches: how erotic cinema boom in 1970s helped shape modern Spain

On top of that, having the original films also helps to improve foreign language skills, namely listening comprehension, pronunciation and vocabulary. Several studies show that watching films in the original language with subtitles can really help language learning, so dubbing undoubtedly takes away from this.

However, there is also the argument that many films and series might never be watched in the Spanish market if they weren’t dubbed because dubbing is so culturally embedded. The movie business is, after all, exactly that: a business.

Neutral accents and small pool of voice actors

If you speak decent Spanish, you might’ve noticed that the type of Spanish used for dubbing is quite distinct. Generally when watching a dubbed film in a Spanish cinema, the accents are quite well spoken — imagine the sort of Spanish you hear on TV adverts or the way news presenters speak.

In Spain, there’s a similar north-south accent divide to the United Kingdom, France and Italy for example, as well as supposed ‘better’ and ‘worse’ ones. In Spain’s case, northern accents are generally considered more neutral or ‘correct’, whereas southern ones are more often discriminated against.

READ ALSO: A handy guide to understanding Spain’s regional accents

In terms of dubbing, as in television more generally, almost all accents chosen are these rather neutral, well-spoken northern or Madrid accents. As is the case with news readers, it would be rare to hear a Murcian or Andalusian accent.

The most famous voice actor in Spain, the late Constantino Romero, made a name for himself thanks to his deep, resounding voice, which allowed him to dub Hollywood stars of the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger, William Shatner, Roger Moore and James Earl Jones.

There’s tended to be a relatively small pool of voice actors in Spain, meaning that the person who does Bruce Willis’ voice also does Kevin Costner’s, or the voice actor who dubs Catherine Zeta-Jones is the voice of Julia Roberts and Sharon Stone as well. 

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