Quinqui (film genre)

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Cine quinqui or cine kinki (meaning "delinquency cinema") is a Spanish exploitation[1] film genre that was most popular at the end of the 1970s and in the 1980s.[2]

Features[edit]

The films were centered around underclass delinquents, drugs, and love, and usually starred non-professional actors picked off the street.[2] The most representative directors of the genre are José Antonio de la Loma [es] and Eloy de la Iglesia, even if other directors such as Carlos Saura, Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón and Vicente Aranda also reproduced the quinqui social imaginaries in some of their films.[3]

Quinqui films focused on marginalized working-class adolescents in the outskirts of Spanish cities involved in small-scale robbery and street crime.[4] They showed raw violence, explicit sex, police brutality, and commonly depicted heroin use.[4]

The genre draws inspiration from Italian neorealism and the French New Wave.[4] Several of the stars of quinqui cinema would go on to die prematurely,[2] most due to heroin use but some of AIDS. Some of them include José Luis Manzano [es] (prostitute at age 16, died from overdose at age 30), El Pirri [es] (heroin user at age 14, found dead in a wasteland at age 23),[5] El Torete [es] (died from AIDS, age 31) and José Antonio Valdelomar [es] (died from heroin overdose, around age 44).[6]

Notable films[edit]

Legacy[edit]

After the demise of the quinqui trend, some directors have looked back to the quinqui era themes in films such as Makinavaja, el último choriso [es] (1992), Semos peligrosos (uséase Makinavaja 2) [es] (1993). Historias del Kronen (1995) Aunque tú no lo sepas [es] (1999), 7 Virgins (2005), Volando voy [es] (2006), El mundo es nuestro [es] (2012), Criando Ratas [es] (2016) or Outlaws.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Castelló Segarra, Jorge (2018). "Cine quinqui. La pobreza como espectáculo de masas". Filmhistoria Online. Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona. 28 (1–2): 114. ISSN 2014-668X.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Alonso, Guillermo (11 February 2019). "Historia negra del cine quinqui: la reivindicación de un género que no dejó supervivientes". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 February 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Imbert, Gérard (2015). "Cine quinqui e imaginarios sociales. Cuerpo e identidades de género" [Quinqui cinema and social imaginaries. Body and gender identities]. Área Abierta. Madrid: Ediciones Complutense. 15 (3): 61. doi:10.5209/rev_ARAB.2015.v15.n3.48937.
  4. ^ a b c d e Moral, Pedro (4 January 2019). "Heroína y crónica negra: guía básica del cine quinqui". Cinemanía (in European Spanish). 20 minutos. Retrieved 3 February 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ Belategui, Oskar (18 April 2018). "Los héroes caídos del cine quinqui". El Correo.
  6. ^ Casas, Quim (12 February 2021). "Cinco actores del cine quinqui: de la delincuencia a la gran pantalla". El Periódico de Catalunya.
  7. ^ a b c d Rosado, Ricardo (8 October 2021). "Las mejores películas del cine quinqui". Fotogramas.