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The ultimate binge-watch bucket list of Spanish box-sets

The coronavirus lockdown means that for once in your life, there's no need to feel guilty about binge watching box-sets. In fact, you could end up feeling quite virtuous for choosing to watch Spanish language series, a surefire way to improve your castellano!

The ultimate binge-watch bucket list of Spanish box-sets
Photo: Netflix

Here are The Local's favourite Spanish series:

Las chicas del cable

The first original series produced by Netflix in Spain premiered in March 2016, with a second season released in December of the same year and a recent third season which came out last September. Created by Ramón Campos and Gema R. Neira, it is set in the 1920s and 1930s in Madrid. Lidia (Blanca Suárez), Ángeles (Maggie Civantos), Marga (Nadia de Santiago) and Carlota (Ana Fernández) start working at the national telephone company, located in the centre of Madrid. The series follows their lives and tells stories of love, friendship, secrets and betrayal, set during some important moments of Spanish history.

This historic drama reflects the society of that time while using some elements from the present, such as modern music. Easy to watch and very enjoyable, you’ll hate the cliffhangers but love the characters.

Paquita Salas

This comedy mockumentary series created by Javier Calvo and Javier Ambrossi was released on the digital platform Flooxer in 2016 and aired on the TV Channel Neox, but in October 2017 Netflix bought the rights and it became an exclusive series of the platform. There was a second season (produced by Netflix) in June 2018, and there is to be a third in the future.

Paquita Salas (Brays Efe), head of PS Management, is a talent representative who was very successful in the 90s but is now struggling with technology and life in modern times. After her most famous actress leaves her agency, she suddenly realises she needs to get her life back on track. Perfect for those with little time to spare (5 episodes per season, around 20 minutes per episode), you’ll swerve between laughing out loud to deep emotion in a flash.

Élite

The first season of this drama/thriller series premiered on October the 5th, and only twelve days later Netflix announced that it will be followed in the future by another season of 8 episodes.

Created by Carlos Montero and Darío Madrona, it is set in the most prestigious private school in Spain, Las Encinas. When their high school is destroyed by an earthquake, three students get a grant to study in this elite academy, and the tension created after their arrival ends in a murder. The series looks at issues like inequality between the upper and working class, revealing the contrast between those who have it all and those who have nothing to lose.

La Casa de Papel (Money Heist)

Produced by Atresmedia and Vancouver Media and created by Álex Pina, the series premiered in May 2017 on Antena 3. Netflix bought the rights and edited it for global distribution with the English title Money Heist. A fourth season was released in 2019. It is the most-viewed non-English language series ever on the platform.

In the thriller/crime drama, a man called “The Professor” (Álvaro Morte) recruits eight people with different abilities to carry out the biggest bank heist in history. They enter the Royal Mint of Spain to print €2.4 billion. dealing with police forces and hostages.

La Catedral del Mar

Co-produced by Atresmedia, Televisió de Catalunya and Netflix and directed by Jordi Frades, this series is based on the novel with the same name written by Ildefonso Falcones. It premiered in May 2018 and has only one season of 8 episodes.

The series is set in Barcelona in the 14th century, when the city is at its peak and the construction of the Santa María del Mar church begins. Arnau Estanyol (Aitor Luna) arrives to the city as a slave and climbs the social hierarchy to a comfortable life, provoking the envy of his enemies who report him to the Inquisition. Through the story of this character, the series shows the social problems in medieval Barcelona under tight control of the Catholic Church.

Vida perfecta

Leticia Dolera is a sort of a pragmatic groundbreaker in all things feminist on the Spanish film scene. The image of a quirky, outspoken, urban girl has become that of a director-screenwriter behind one of the best TV productions Spain has to offer.

Maria, Cristina and Esther are three women finding their way around minor and major frustrations of late 30s. Esther, Maria’s sister has trouble breaking away from student lifestyle while struggling to be recognized – by herself and the world – as artist.

Cristina, once idealist, is a corporate women in a marriage void of communication and Maria, the central character played by Dolera, had just broken up with her partner, only to remain pregnant due to a twist of fate.

Yes, it does play on the stereotypes, one in particular, but we do not mind, because it gives such good vibrations. The side characters are well-woven into the narrative, colorful, but never kitschy and played by some of the known names of the local film world.

Premios Ferroz, Spain's equvalent of the Emmys saw Vida Perfecta win the Best Comedy series award, casting away all doubts about the second season hitting the screens in the coming months.

Foodie Love

Director Isabel Coixet is behind this HBO series whose neon-ish billboard ads were everywhere at the end of last year. You'd be forgiven for thinking this an easily digestible series where these two young people fall in love over their shared pleasure in food.

To be fair, these elements are not absent, but rather feature as backdrop.

The first insight is that you need to keep watching beyond episode three. If you do, you will be rewarded as the grim beginning that seems to have little direction beyond that of making you a rather confused participant in a series of encounters showing two people not hitting it off, gives way to a solid narrative, a love story and an underlying tragedy.

Clothes are stylish, places beautiful and naked bodies covered in flour building up on what seems to be an established relationship between nudity and edible matters that Coixet so insistently pursued in her recent film Elisa y Marcela.

El Embarcadero

The first season of this HBO series tells the story of Oscar, Alejandra and Veronica and a love triangle that must be untangled following Oscar's apparent suicide.

We travel between the past and present as Alexandra, his wife and Veronica, his longtime lover, begin to grasp the new reality. As Oscar had concealed the affair from his wife, she in an almost interesting twist in the plot, decides to find and confront the lover.

However, new discoveries lead to a cohabitation between women, with Alexandra discovering her unexplored creativity, sexuality and independence.

Cuéntame cómo pasó (Tell me how it happened)


Photo: rtve.es

If you want to delve into a series that charts the tumultuous modern history of Spain, you can do no better than Cúentame cómo pasó, also known as Cuéntame, which charts the highs and lows of one family from the last days of the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco into Spain’s new democracy.

The series has been a huge hit in Spain and is currently onto its 17th series which takes place in 1984.

The series was originally created to mark the 25th anniversary of Spain’s transition to democracy and begins in 1968 with the Eurovision victory of Spanish entry Massiel – who some say won because of the fact that Franco bribed the judges.

Gran Hotel


Photo: Antena3.com

If you are a fan of Downton Abbey then you are bound to like Gran Hotel, set in the upstairs-downstairs world inhabited by the guests and staff at a grand Spanish hotel towards the beginning of the 20th century.

The series, first broadcast in Spain in 2011, follows the disappearance of one of the hotel maids and her brother’s search for the truth about what happened to her.

The series is part period piece, part mystery and was filmed in the beautiful Palacio de la Magdalena in Santander.

El tiempo entre costuras (The Seamstress) 


Photo: Antena3.com

Based on the bestselling novel by Spanish author Maria Dueñas, El tiempo entre costuras (The Time Betwen the Seams, translated as The Seamstress in English) follows the fortunes of Sira, a seamstress from Madrid.

The series charts her journey of falling in love, travelling to Morocco, then becoming embroiled in the Spanish Civil War, during which she is recruited as a spy and made to sow secrets into the seams of her clothes.

The 11 episodes are 70 minutes each, allowing the epic saga to play out slowly, brewing to its final dramatic conclusion.

Isabel


Photo: rtve.es

Isabel follows one of the most powerful women in history – Isabel I of Castilla, who ruled as queen at a time when the thought of a woman running the kingdom was unthinkable.

The three seasons follow Isabel from the end of childhood and her marriage to Ferdinand of Aragon through her patronage of Christopher Columbus and the various turmoils that beset her family. 

Velvet


Photo: Antena3.com

Set in a 1950s department store on Madrid’s Gran Via, Velvet follows the love story between the department store heir and one of the store’s seamstresses.

The Velvet department store is the jewel in the crown of Madrid’s fashion scene: elegant, sophisticated and a whole new world of decadence.

The production values are high (each episode cost an estimated €500,000) and the series is available on Netflix in the USA and UK.

El Ministerio del Tiempo (The Ministry of Time)


Photo: rtve.es

This Spanish science fiction series, the lovechild of Doctor Who and Quantum Leap, follows a top secret department of the Spanish government that reports directly to the Prime Minsiter: the Ministry of Time. The ministry guards the doors of time to make sure time travellers can't change history for their own benefit.

The series follows the ministry’s newest patrol, made up of Army of Flanders soldier Alonso de Entrerríos, 19th century student Amelia Folch and 21st century paramedic Julián Martínez.

The series features some of history's most famous faces including Franco, Hitler, Picasso and even a cameo from Queen Isabel (the same one from the series Isabel).

Vis a Vis 


Photo: Antena3.com

While it does bear more than a passing resemblance to Orange is the New Black, if you were into the original you should check out this Spanish TV series which follows the fate of one woman who, because of her boyfriend, ends up being sent to prison.

The series follows how she adapts to prison life, while her family on the outside desperately attempt to find the money to pay for her bail.

El Principe


Photo: telecinco.es

This crime series is set in the troubled El Principe Alfonso area of Spain’s North African enclave of Ceuta, which borders Morocco.

The drama centres around a love story between Javier, a Catholic policeman sent to the area to investigate links to jihadist activities in the Spanish enclave and Fatima, the Muslim sister of a local drug dealer.

The series is a great opportunity to glimpse another side of Spain, in its seldom seen North African enclaves and is quite topical – several suspected jihadists have been arrested in Ceuta in recent months.

Bajo Sospecha (Under suspicion


Photo: artesmedia

This series follows the disappearance of seven-year-old Alicia Vega, who vanishes on the day of her First Holy Communion.

Two weeks later and all police know for sure is that the culprit was linked to the ceremony in some way. To find out more, undercover agents Víctor and Laura pretend to be a married couple and move to the village in an attempt to get to know the girl’s family and friends and in doing so, find the culprit.

READ MORE: 

 

These were the five stand-out Spanish films of 2019

Ten classic films you never knew were shot in Spain

 

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COVID-19

Public Health Agency recommends two Covid doses next year for elderly

Sweden's Public Health Agency is recommending that those above the age of 80 should receive two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine a year, once in the spring and once in the autumn, as it shifts towards a longer-term strategy for the virus.

Public Health Agency recommends two Covid doses next year for elderly

In a new recommendation, the agency said that those living in elderly care centres, and those above the age of 80 should from March 1st receive two vaccinations a year, with a six month gap between doses. 

“Elderly people develop a somewhat worse immune defence after vaccination and immunity wanes faster than among young and healthy people,” the agency said. “That means that elderly people have a greater need of booster doses than younger ones. The Swedish Public Health Agency considers, based on the current knowledge, that it will be important even going into the future to have booster doses for the elderly and people in risk groups.” 

READ ALSO: 

People between the ages of 65 and 79 years old and young people with risk factors, such as obesity, diabetes, poor kidney function or high blood pressure, are recommended to take one additional dose per year.

The new vaccination recommendation, which will start to apply from March 1st next year, is only for 2023, Johanna Rubin, the investigator in the agency’s vaccination programme unit, explained. 

She said too much was still unclear about how long protection from vaccination lasted to institute a permanent programme.

“This recommendation applies to 2023. There is not really an abundance of data on how long protection lasts after a booster dose, of course, but this is what we can say for now,” she told the TT newswire. 

It was likely, however, that elderly people would end up being given an annual dose to protect them from any new variants, as has long been the case with influenza.

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