Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Tristana

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron7.6
7.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Luis Bunuel

Duration
  

Country
  
SpainFranceItaly

7.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Language
  
Spanish

Tristana Tristana

Writer
  
Julio Alejandro
,
Luis Bunuel
,
Benito Perez Galdos

Release date
  
29 March 1970 (1970-03-29)

Initial DVD release
  
November 14, 2005 (France)

Screenplay
  
Luis Bunuel, Julio Alejandro

Cast
  
Catherine Deneuve
(Tristana),
Fernando Rey
(Don Lope),
Franco Nero
(Horacio),
Lola Gaos
(Saturna),
Antonio Casas
(Don Cosme),
Jesús Fernández
(Saturno)

Similar movies
  
Survivor
,
The Boy Next Door
,
Salt
,
Slumdog Millionaire
,
Twinkle
,
Hugo

Tagline
  
Somewhere between the innocent girl and the not so innocent mistress is the bizarre, sensuous story of Tristana

Tristana 1970 trailer


Tristana is a 1970 Spanish film directed by Luis Buñuel. Based on the eponymous novel by Benito Pérez Galdós, it stars Catherine Deneuve and Fernando Rey and was shot in Toledo, Spain. The voices of French actress Catherine Deneuve and Italian actor Franco Nero were dubbed to Spanish. Tristana is a Spanish-Franco-Italian co-production.

Contents

Tristana movie scenes

Tristana trailer cohen film collection


Plot

Tristana movie scenes

The story is set in the late 1920s to early 1930s. Tristana is an orphan adopted by nobleman don Lope Garrido. Don Lope falls in love with her and thus treats her as wife as well as daughter from the age of 19. But, by age 21 Tristana starts finding her voice, to demand to study music, art and other subjects with which she wishes to become independent. She meets the young artist Horacio Díaz, falls in love, and eventually leaves Toledo to live with him. When she falls ill, she returns to don Lope. The illness results in her losing a leg, which changes her prospects; here, the film substantially varies from the novel.

Tristana Tristana

Don Lope inherits money from his sister, Tristana eventually marries him, and, when don Lope is ill, Tristana finishes him off by feigning calling the doctor and opening the window to the winter cold.

Tristana Tristana

Differences from the novel

In the novel, Tristana resignedly marries don Lope in order for him to receive his inheritance. Also different from the novel is Saturno's increased role -- barely mentioned in the novel, he is Tristana's third love interest in the film.

Cast

  • Catherine Deneuve as Tristana
  • Fernando Rey as Don Lope
  • Franco Nero as Horacio
  • Lola Gaos as Saturna
  • Antonio Casas as Don Cosme
  • Jesús Fernández as Saturno
  • Denise Menace as Armanda
  • Vicente Solar as Don Ambrosio
  • José Calvo as Bellringer
  • Fernando Cebrián as Dr. Miquis
  • Production

    Tristana Tristana

    Buñuel first began working on Tristana in 1962 after Spanish censors rejected his script Secuestro. Buñuel suggested adapting Benito Pérez Galdós's novel instead to his producers at Epoca and was paid $30,000 to write the screenplay. Buñuel and Julio Alejandro wrote the script in December 1962 and updated the novel's setting to the period between the late 1920s to early 1930s. Buñuel and Epoca submitted their script to the Spanish censors in the spring of 1963, hoping to begin shooting in the summer. At the last minute, the Ministry of Culture rejected the script because of its depiction of duelling and Buñuel made Diary of a Chambermaid instead.

    In December 1968, Buñuel decided to return to Spain after being allowed back into the Catholic Church. When he returned, producers from Epoca approached him about reviving Tristana. Buñuel was initially uninterested and wanted to instead film his script for The Monk, which would have starred Jeanne Moreau, Peter O'Toole and Omar Sharif. But producers at Epoca managed to find funding from Italian and French investors and secure the newly built Siena Studios in Madrid, convincing Buñuel to agree to the project. Buñuel and Alejandro quickly finished their fourth draft of the screenplay.

    Buñuel wanted Tristana to be his triumphant return to Spain after living in Mexico for several decades and worked hard on the film. Buñuel travelled to Spain in the spring of 1969 to begin work on the film, and was immediately sidetracked by the Spanish censors. Spain's Franco government made it difficult for the notorious and outspoken atheist Buñuel to get his films approved. However, Minister of Information Manuel Fraga Iribarne was known to be more liberal than past Ministers and told Buñuel that he would approve the script only if Buñuel promised to not change the script during the film's shooting. Buñuel refused, stating that the script was merely a blueprint. Eventually Buñuel got his and Fraga's mutual friend Rafael Mendez to act as a go-between and convince Fraga to approve the script.

    Buñuel's French investors insisted that Catherine Deneuve be cast as Tristana and his Italian investors wanted young heartthrob Franco Nero to play Horacio. Filming began in September 1969. Actress Vanessa Redgrave was often on the film's set after recently divorcing Tony Richardson for Nero, which caused Nero to often be late or distracted during filming. The film's plot has many similarities to Buñuel's earlier film Viridiana and the character of Don Lope is partially based on Buñuel's father, who was also a "señorito". Buñuel based much of Tristana's schoolgirl innocence on memories of his younger sister Conchita.

    Awards

    It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and screened at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival but was not entered into the main competition.

    References

    Tristana Wikipedia
    Tristana IMDb Tristana themoviedb.org