Sally Faulkner
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Film School shorts
La noche del doctor Valdés and Carmen de Carabenchel
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This chapter examines, first, the particular nature of Spain’s Film School, which existed for most of the dictatorship, from 1947 to 1976, before homing in on the gendered experience of female students at it, like Bartolomé. It extensively reads extant archive material held at the Filmoteca Española, much of which has barely been touched by scholars, to capture Film School teachers’ and fellow students’ responses to Bartolomé’s work. This affords us some sense of the contemporary reception of the work – limited, of course, to this group of experts. It proceeds to survey Bartolomé’s extant work at the School, before closely reading two shorts: La noche del doctor Valdés / Doctor Valdés’s Night (1964) and Carmen de Carabenchel / Carmen from Carabenchel (1965). In them, the chapter identifies Bartolomé’s early aesthetic investigation of female characterisation, melodrama, the intertextual deployment of television in film, comedy and music. The thematic content of these shorts, the chapter also argues, are critical for the history of feminism in Spain in the 1960s: excessive religiosity and the desire for freedom in La noche; and the particularly important call for legal contraception and abortion among the Spanish working classes is Carmen.

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