NEWS - Clamoroso al Bernabéu! Netflix commissiona la prima serie tv in Spagna (alla stessa casa di produzione di "Velvet": semos rovinatis, companeros!)
News tratta da "Variety"
“Velvet” and “Gran Hotel” director Carlos Sedes and producers Ramon Campos and Teresa Fernandez Valdes (pictured) at Bambu Producciones will re-team to make the first Netflix original series shot and produced in Spain.
With no official title for the moment, the 16-episode
Spanish-language drama, set in the 1920s, turns on four women from
different backgrounds hired as switchboard operators at Spain’s only
telephone company in central Madrid.
Co-created by Campos and Gema Neira, his long-term writing partner,
and produced by Madrid-based Bambu Producciones, Spain’s first Netflix
original series will start production in Madrid in 2016, debuting
exclusively on Netflix around the globe in 2017.
Bambu founders Campos and Fernandez Valdes will serve as executive
producers. Episodes will run an international standard 50-minutes,
shorter than Spain’s norm.
After the 1905-set mystery-romance drama “Gran Hotel” and “Velvet,” a
romantic drama set in a rambunctious and stylish high-fashion house in
‘50s/60s Spain, Bambu’s Netflix original series returns to history to
tell the story of four women from all over Spain who come to work at the
forefront of a communications revolution in the middle of Madrid – a
place which represents progress and modernity. As in other Bambu
Producciones dramas, emotions run a wide gamut. Jealousy, envy and
betrayal mix with a hunger for success, with friendship and love but,
above all, with dreams.
“It is incredibly exciting to have Netflix in Spain. We are
enthusiastic fans of its original series and it is a real honor for us
to now be part of this project,” said Ramon Campos, “It is a joy to work
with Netflix’s extremely talented team, who is revolutionizing the
television industry worldwide,” added Teresa Fernandez Valdes, executive
producer of the series.
“We’re delighted to be working with Bambu Producciones, director
Carlos Sedes and cocreator Gema Neira on our first original series
filmed in Spain,” added Erik Barmack, vice president of international
original series at Netflix. “We’re huge fans of their work on ‘Gran
Hotel’ and ‘Velvet,’ epic romances that have been embraced by our
members around the world. We’re certain that our members will love this
unique and engaging drama created by some of the best storytellers in
Spain.”
The Netflix-Bambu commission builds on a relationship, Netflix
acquiring both “Gran Hotel” and “Velvet.” It is also marks further
recognition for a group of TV creatives from Galicia, North-West Spain,
which broke through mid-last decade with Sedes directing the
Campos-created 2006 drama “Life Ahead,” about fishermen’s widows.
Influenced by the U.S. mid-last-decade drama boom, and moving to
Madrid where Fernandez Valdes and Campos launched Bambu Producciones in
2007, their primetime series, though produced with free-to-air
broadcasters, such as Atresmedia Group, have often pushed the envelope,
bringing some neo-cable edge sense of something different to
productions: 2006’s “Desaparecida,” produced by Madrid’s Ganga but
creared by Campos, brought a sense of serialized “Twin Peaks” intrigue t
a lost daughter-thriller; “Velvet” is set in an (obviously)
fictionalized Spain.
Toplining hearthrob Spanish TV stars, Bambu has produced surefire
primetime TV hits in Spain, a country where local fiction has most often
since the launch of private networks in 1990, blown U.S. drama out of
the waters.
Making series which Campos one termed as melding “telenovela
melodrama, a British look and an American pace,” Bambu has also,
however, been at the forefront of Spain’s more recent TV revolution: Its
international export success.
“Gran Hotel” ran for three seasons on Atresmedia over 2011-13,
punching a first season 18.5% audience share. Sold and co-produced by
Beta Film, the Italian reversion aired on RAI primetime in Italy.
Original has broadcast on major Gallic broadcaster M6, U.K.’s Sky Arts
and, in the U.S. on VmeTV. Beta Film svp Christina Gockel described
“Gran Hotel” as one of Beta’s “biggest sales hits and franchises of
recent years.”
In a pioneering move, Bambu also teamed with Atresmedia and BBC
Worldwide to produce the high-concept English-language sci-fi drama “The
Refugees.”
venerdì 1 aprile 2016
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1 commento:
che schifo!
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