La vaquilla (English: The Heifer) is a 1985 Spanish comedy film written and directed by Luis García Berlanga. It was the first comedy made about the Spanish Civil War and the highest-grossing Spanish film in Spain at the time surpassing Los santos inocentes.[1][2]
La vaquilla | |
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Directed by | Luis García Berlanga |
Written by | Rafael Azcona Luis García Berlanga |
Produced by | Alfredo Matas |
Starring | Alfredo Landa José Sacristán Adolfo Marsillach Santiago Ramos Guillermo Montesinos Amparo Soler Leal |
Cinematography | Carlos Suárez |
Edited by | José Luis Matesanz |
Music by | Miguel Asins Arbó |
Release date |
|
Running time | 122 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish |
Box office | 527,303,939 pesetas[1] |
During the Spanish Civil War on the Aragón frontline the speakers of the Nationalist troops announce a festival in a nearby village which includes a bull run and religious procession. A group of Republican soldiers infiltrate the Nationalist side to steal the animal for two reasons; to ruin the holiday for the Nationalists and because their food stores are low.
The film was shot mainly in Sos del Rey Católico with many locals as extras. In 2009 the village homaged the surviving artists.
Films directed by Luis García Berlanga | |
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