Daniel Calparsoro, a director who has provided a crucial contribution to
the contemporary scene in Spanish and Basque cinema, has provoked strong
reactions from the critics. Reductively dismissed as a purveyor of crude
violence by those critics lamenting a 'lost golden age' of Spanish
filmmaking, Calparsoro's films reveal in fact a more complex interaction
with trends and traditions in both Spanish and Hollywood cinema.
This book is the first full-length study of the director's work, from
his early social realist films set in the Basque Country to his later
forays into the genres of the war and horror film. It offers an in-depth
film-by-film analysis, while simultaneously exploring the function of
the director in the contemporary Spanish context, the tension between
directors and critics, and the question of national cinema in an area -
the Basque Country - of heightened national and regional
sensitivities.