Writing
No biography available.
A chronicle of the demonstrations and public events held on the occasion of the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on April 14, 1931 (Sound newsreel shot by Fox Movietone News discovered in 2009.)
Spain, April 14, 1931. The Second Republic is born. From the beginning, the writer Miguel de Unamuno is considered one of the ethical pillars of the new regime. Five years later, on December 31, 1936, a few months after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), Unamuno dies at his home in Salamanca, capital of the rebel side, led by General Francisco Franco, and main center of dissemination of its propaganda apparatus.
Raquel's not able to have children, so she and her boyfriend manipulate another young woman into bearing his child.
Joaquin Monegro feels a huge hatred for Abel Sánchez, who was once his best friend. Over the years, Monegro marries without love, and tries to have his children marry, but not forgetting Abel so far.
Unsympathetic portrait of a man who's too macho to display his feelings.
A foreign woman marries a rich man.
In a modern take of Miguel de Unamuno’s 1930’s novel “San Martín Bueno, martir”, where a priest loses faith in god, “Times of Insurrection” tells the story of the CEO of a global corporation who starts to lose faith in capitalism after a mysterious external pressure forces him to change his company forever.
A group of comedians who travel from village to village witness the old traditions of rural Spain.
The plot tells the night in which Miguel de Unamuno receives a lot of letters that tell the story of Don Manuel, the priest of Valverde de Lucerna, adored and followed by all his people. However, as Unamuno discovers his story, he realizes that Don Manuel is hiding a secret that could put his beloved town in check.
Through hard work, the Spaniard Alejandro has become wealthy and powerful. In contrast, the banker Don Victorino—who once refused a loan to the then-poor Alejandro—has fallen on difficult times. Victorino is married to Ana, who spends her life playing the piano, and they are the parents of the proud Julia, who is engaged to Enrique Régules. Julia is forced to marry Alejandro in order to save her family’s financial situation. Despite her husband’s blunt and often harsh honesty, Julia gradually finds herself falling in love with him, and vainly tries to make him jealous with Licenciado Héctor, who courts her. Julia becomes nervously ill, troubled by the fact that Alejandro does not love her in the romantic, storybook way she longs for.