Flamenco

Director: Carlos Saura
Genre: Documentary, Music, Dance, World cinema, Musical
Year: 1995
Country: Spain, Portugal
Language: Spanish Language
Starring: Francisca Méndez Garrido, Merche Esmeralda, Manolo Sanlúcar, Joaquín Cortés, Manuel Moneo, Manuel Agujetas, Mario Maya, Paco Torunjo, Antonio Toscano, Fernanda de Utrera, José Meneses, Enrique Morente, Matilde Coral, José Mercé

Flamenco is a 1995 Spanish documentary film directed by Carlos Saura with camerawork by acclaimed cinematographer Vittorio Storaro. The film is entirely musical and dancing vignettes, composed and photographed on a sound stage.

Flamenco is a documentary that includes performances from some of the best flamenco singers, dancers and guitarists. Helped by cinematography by Vittorio Storaro, director Carlos Saura brings with this film the "Light of Flamenco to the World".

As a hall fills with performers, a narrator says that flamenco came from Andalucia, a mix of Greek psalms, Mozarabic dirges, Castillian ballads, Jewish laments, Gregorian chants, African rhythms, and Iranian and Romany melodies. The film presents thirteen rhythms of flamenco, each with song, guitar, and dance: the up-tempo bularías, a brooding farruca, an anguished martinete, and a satiric fandango de huelva. There are tangos, a taranta, alegrías, siguiriyas, soleás, a guajira of patrician women, a petenera about a sentence to death, villancicos, and a final rumba. Families present numbers, both festive and fierce. The camera and the other performers are the only audience.

This film shows a world of flamenco --

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