Julio Diamante Trailers
La Carmen TrailerEl arte de vivir Trailer
Julio Diamante (27 December 1930 – 1 August 2020) was a Spanish film director and screenwriter . He directed ten films between 1959 and 1976. His 1965 film The Art of Living was entered into the 15th Berlin International Film Festival . He died on 1 August 2020 in Madrid at the age of 89.
Most Popular Julio Diamante Trailers
Total trailers found: 10
27 August 1962
First World War. In a largely rural area of neutral Spain, two families confront one another and play a part in embarrassing situations because they don't support the same side in the war.
26 January 1976
A young ex-seminarian named José is doing his military service in Córdoba. There he meets Carmen, a beautiful flamenco dancer who falls madly in love, to the point that he steals to get money for her, so he will be imprisoned.
05 September 1974
Paco, a frustrated office worker, goes to the office of a psychologist, to whom he tells his most delirious sexual fantasies in the hope that he will apply a curative therapy.
02 April 1970
Inspired by the French classic Les diaboliques (1955), this psycho-thriller copies that film rather closely.
29 September 1955
Taking Franz Kafka's "The Process" as a source of inspiration, a poetic approach is made to his plot, to his characters and sets turned into icons, a meta-theatrical reflection where the gestural language and the surrealist elements imply a very personal reading of the Czech author.
26 July 1966
After graduating in Economics, Luis is seeking to burst through in life. His partner Ana sees how his way of being is changing by the standards of his company into a different person.
13 September 1964
Three stories in which love plays a decisive role intersect. The first of them is led by a couple who decides to break with the chastity they have been keeping until then.
05 February 1969
Country bumpkin Frank runs into a gangland shooting, driving the victims to the gang's headquarters. He soon earns a place in Erik's mob.
28 September 1955
A man, whom we don't identify, kills himself with his razor because he can no longer bear the complaints of his wife, whose face we can't see well either.