Joaquin Phoenix ride on billboards of movie premieres of this weekend ‘Napoleon’ by Ridley Scott Blanca Portillo, St. Teresa of Christ from the film by Paula Ortiz of Aragon, also accompanies her.
Also premieres this Friday Disney animated movie ‘Wish: The power of wishes’Manuel Martín Cuenca’s new film ‘Andrea’s Love’ and Charlotte Regan’s ‘Scrapper’, one of the revelations of the year in British cinema.
Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon Bonaparte
Joaquin Phoenix, who won an Oscar for the movie ‘Joker’ (2019) and is one of the most solution-oriented actors of his generation puts himself in the shoes of Napoleon Bonaparte Under the command of Ridley Scott, in a film about his military victories and his obsessive relationship with Josefina (Vanessa Kirby).
With its spectacular battle scenes, ‘Napoleon’ is the story of a man who started from the bottom and found the necessary structure in the Army to improve. According to Scott, criticisms received for lack of historical rigor are in some ways dramatically justified. licence. .
Disney celebrates history with ‘Wish: The power of wishes’
‘Wish: The power of desire’ is a fairy tale in which Disney pays homage to the most emblematic characters in its history. centennial of the company.
On a magical island in the Mediterranean called Rosas, a king keeps the summarized wishes of all his subjects in his palace. When apprentice Asha realizes that the king has no intention of realizing these dreams, she asks for help from a star in the sky.
Blanca Portillo is a doubting ‘Teresa’
Aragonese Paula Ortiz after adapting Lorca in the film ‘The Bride’ (2015) St. Teresa of Jesus, This film explores the appeal of the 16th-century Spanish mystic priestess and writer through Juan Mayorga’s work ‘Language in Fragments’.
Blanca Portillo It stars the mature Teresa, the young Greta Fernández and the girl Ainet Jounou (“Alcarràs”).Asier Etxeandía puts himself in the shoes of the investigator who is judging him. ‘Teresa’ argues that doubt and imagination are tools of faith.
Love, family and disenchantment according to Martín Cuenca
Manuel Martín Cuenca, the director of the films “Caníbal”, “El autor” and “La hija”, for which he received many Goya nominations, returns with a new film. Family drama told from the young girl’s point of view The story of a couple searching for answers to their father’s disappearance while caring for their siblings.
“Andrea’s Love”, with music by Vetusta Morla, was shot in chronological order, and none of the actors, all first-timers, knew the script in advance.
‘Scrapper’, the brilliant story of an absent father
Won the Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival One of this year’s biggest favorites of independent British cinema, Charlotte Regan’s debut film ‘Scrapper’ is about the relationship between an absent father and his 12-year-old daughter.
Georgie – debutante Lola Campbell – lives alone in her London flat after the death of her mother, unbeknownst to anyone, until one day her father, played by Harris Dickinson, known for his “Triangle of Life” sadness, reappears.
‘Heroico’ reveals violence in Mexican army
With Michel Franco as producer In his second feature film, Mexican David Zonana explores violence, machismo and corruption in Mexico in a drama centered on the Army and featuring several former military personnel as actors, including protagonist Santiago Sandoval.
The ‘heroic’ one He competed at the last San Sebastián Festival, It tells the story of a young man who goes to military school to get health insurance for his diabetic mother and who is turned into a toy in the hands of his superiors who subject him to all kinds of humiliating treatment.
‘No, I don’t want’ condemned forced marriage
4 women victims of forced marriage The protagonists of ‘No, I don’t want’ who can rebel and confront their families Documentary film directed by Madrid native Belén Santos This is an article condemning the ‘modern form of slavery’.
Aya and Amy are African grandchildren born in Catalonia; Jamila is of Moroccan origin, born in the south of Spain, and María is from Bangladesh and grew up in Badalona.
‘I had a life’; hard life on the street
Canarian Octavio Guerra directs this documentary It tells the story of a man’s struggle to never live on the street again. In this situation, he reaches a shelter after ten years, but his lack of autonomy pushes him to look for another solution with the help of the shelter’s coordinator, Elena.
Source: Informacion

Brandon Hall is an author at “Social Bites”. He is a cultural aficionado who writes about the latest news and developments in the world of art, literature, music, and more. With a passion for the arts and a deep understanding of cultural trends, Brandon provides engaging and thought-provoking articles that keep his readers informed and up-to-date on the latest happenings in the cultural world.