Archives
Edition 2016
Films
Crew:
Director: Agustín Díaz Yanes
Screenplay: Agustín Díaz Yanes
DOP: Paco Femenia
Production: Flamenco Films S.A., Tornasol Films, Cartel Films
Screenplay: Agustín Díaz Yanes
DOP: Paco Femenia
Production: Flamenco Films S.A., Tornasol Films, Cartel Films
Heaven is empty, Hell is full. Each soul is tenaciously fought over by both sides. A boxer battling a potentially life-threatening brain injury finds his soul to be the object of a metaphysical fight. Two different supernatural agents are sent to win over his soul to their side: one is an angel from a curious version of Heaven, that looks just like a beatific Paris; and the other agent is a waitress from Hell, sent to seduce him into spending eternity in a red-tinted prison.
-
Cast:
Victoria Abril, Penélope Cruz, Demián Bichir -
Original Title:
Sin Noticias de Dios -
Country:
Spain, France, Italy, Mexico -
Year:
2001 - 112’
Crew:
Director: Agustín Díaz Yanes
Screenplay: Agustín Díaz Yanes
DOP: Paco Femenia
Production: Flamenco Films S.A., Tornasol Films, Cartel Films
Screenplay: Agustín Díaz Yanes
DOP: Paco Femenia
Production: Flamenco Films S.A., Tornasol Films, Cartel Films
Director
Agustín Díaz Yanes

Spanish filmmaker, scriptwriter and writer, with a background in History, Agustín Díaz
Yanes begins his path in cinema by writing scripts, later adapted by other directors (mainly those of Baton Rouge and A solas contigo, films starring the actress Victoria Abril). Almodóvar’s assistant in Atame! (1990), Diaz Yanes writes and directs his first film in 1995, Nadie hablará de nosotras cuando hayamos muerto/Nobody Will Speak of Us When We’re Dead, which turns out to be a big success among critics and the public, awarded eight Goya Awards, including the award for best film, best director, best screenplay, (and best actress to Victoria Abril), a piece of work which will be continued by Solo quiero caminar (2008). After Sin noticias de Dios/Don't Tempt Me (2001, a fantastic comedy, bringing together Penélope Cruz and Victoria Abril again), he signs Alatriste (2006), starring Viggo Mortensen in the lead role, a portrait of 17th century Spain adapting the five saga romances, Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste by Arturo Pérez-Reverte. His most recent film, Oro, renews the partnership with Pérez-Reverte, adapting one of latter’s unpublished short stories, which addresses the search by a group of Spanish explorers for the El Dorado in the Amazon rainforest in the 16th century, inspired by the expedition of the conquerors Lope de Aguirre and Núñez de Balboa. Díaz Yanes is also the author of a novel, Simpatía por el diablo (2012, the title is a tribute to the famous Rolling Stones’ song), which contains references to his friend and writer Javier Marías, especially to Marías’ book, Los enamoramientos (2011). Agustín Díaz Yanes will be one of the guests at the Lisbon & Estoril Film Festival and will accompany the retrospective dedicated to his works.
Yanes begins his path in cinema by writing scripts, later adapted by other directors (mainly those of Baton Rouge and A solas contigo, films starring the actress Victoria Abril). Almodóvar’s assistant in Atame! (1990), Diaz Yanes writes and directs his first film in 1995, Nadie hablará de nosotras cuando hayamos muerto/Nobody Will Speak of Us When We’re Dead, which turns out to be a big success among critics and the public, awarded eight Goya Awards, including the award for best film, best director, best screenplay, (and best actress to Victoria Abril), a piece of work which will be continued by Solo quiero caminar (2008). After Sin noticias de Dios/Don't Tempt Me (2001, a fantastic comedy, bringing together Penélope Cruz and Victoria Abril again), he signs Alatriste (2006), starring Viggo Mortensen in the lead role, a portrait of 17th century Spain adapting the five saga romances, Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste by Arturo Pérez-Reverte. His most recent film, Oro, renews the partnership with Pérez-Reverte, adapting one of latter’s unpublished short stories, which addresses the search by a group of Spanish explorers for the El Dorado in the Amazon rainforest in the 16th century, inspired by the expedition of the conquerors Lope de Aguirre and Núñez de Balboa. Díaz Yanes is also the author of a novel, Simpatía por el diablo (2012, the title is a tribute to the famous Rolling Stones’ song), which contains references to his friend and writer Javier Marías, especially to Marías’ book, Los enamoramientos (2011). Agustín Díaz Yanes will be one of the guests at the Lisbon & Estoril Film Festival and will accompany the retrospective dedicated to his works.