

Eloy de la Iglesia
Directing
January 1, 1944
Zarautz, Gipuzkoa, Spain
March 23, 2006
De la Iglesia was an outspoken gay socialist filmmaker who is relatively unknown outside Spain despite a prolific and successful career in his native country. He is best remembered for having portrayed urban marginality and the world of drugs and juvenile delinquency in the early 1980s. Part of his work is closely related to the phenomenon popularly known in Spain as quinqui films, to which he contributed with several works. His film are an example of commitment to the immediate reality. They were made with honesty and great risk, against the conformist outlook of most movies of its time. Beyond their debatable aesthetic merits, his film served a document of the Spanish marginality of the late seventies and early eighties, and they have the stamp of his strong personality. Many of this films also deal with the theme of homosexuality.
The Filmography


The Tobacconist of Vallecas

Turn of the Screw

El Pico 2

Overdose

Pals

Navajeros

Afraid to Go Out at Night

Confessions of a Congressman

The Priest

The Creature

Hidden Pleasures

La otra alcoba

Forbidden Love Game

No One Heard the Scream

The Cannibal Man

The Glass Ceiling
