This volume is the first English-language collection exclusively dedicated to the study of genre in relation to Spanish cinema. Providing a variety of critical perspectives, the collection gives the reader a thorough account of the relationship between Spanish cinema and genre, drawing on case studies of several of the most remarkable Spanish films in recent years. The book analyses the significant changes in the aesthetics, production and reception of Spanish film from 1990 onwards. It brings together European and North American scholars to establish a critical dialogue on the topics under discussion, while providing multiple perspectives on the concepts of national cinemas and genre theory. In recent years film scholarship has attempted to negotiate the tension between the nationally specific and the internationally ubiquitous, discussing how globalisation has influenced film making and surrounding cultural practice. These broader social concerns have prompted scholars to emphasise a redefinition of national cinemas beyond strict national boundaries and to pay attention to the transnational character of any national site of film production and reception. This collection provides a thorough investigation of contemporary Spanish cinema within a transnational framework, by positing cinematic genres as the meeting spaces between a variety of diverse forces that necessarily operate within but also across territorial spaces. Paying close attention to the specifics of the Spanish cinematic and social panorama, the essays investigate the transnational economic, cultural and aesthetic forces at play in shaping Spanish film genres today
Acknowledgments Contributors Foreword - Robert Sklar Introduction - Jay Beck and Vicente Rodriguez Ortega Section I - Industry, marketing and film culture 1. The fantastic factory: the horror genre and contemporary Spanish cinema - Andrew Willis 2. Trailing the Spanish auteur: Amenabar, Almodovar & de la Iglesia's generic routes in the US market - Vicente Rodriguez Ortega 3. 'Now playing everywhere': Spanish horror film in the marketplace - Antonio Lazaro-Reboll Section II - Generic hybridity: negotiating the regional, the national and the transnational 4. From Sevilla to the world: the transnational and transgeneric initiative of La Zanfona Producciones - Josetxo Cerdan and Miguel Fernandez Labanyen 5. *Justino, un asesino de la tercera edad*: Spanishness, dark comedy and horror - Juan F. Egea 6. Tracing the past, dealing with the present: notes on the political thriller in contemporary Spanish cinema - Vicente J. Benet 7. Selling out Spain: screening capital and culture in *Airbag* and *Smoking Room* - William Nichols Section III - Genre & authorship 8. The transvestite figure and film noir: Pedro Almodovar's transnational imaginary - Carla Marcantonio 9. Caressing the text: episodic erotics and generic structures in Ventura Pons's 'Minimalist Trilogy' - David Scott Diffrient 10. Horror of allegory: *The Others* and its contexts - Ernesto R. Acevedo-Munoz 11. Love, loneliness and laundromats: affect and artifice in the cinema of Isabel Coixet - Belen Vidal Section IV - Multilingual imaginaries, borderless Spain 12. Dancing with 'Spanishness': Hollywood codes and the site of memory in the contemporary film musical - Pietsie Feenstra 13. Immigration films: communicating conventions of (in)visibility in contemporary Spain - Maria Van Liew 14. Spanish-Cuban co-productions: tourism, transnational romance and anxieties of authenticity - Mariana Johnson Index