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Rauw Alejandro: Cosa Nuestra: Capítulo 0 Album Review
Music

Rauw Alejandro: Cosa Nuestra: Capítulo 0 Album Review

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s rare these days for an album to be allowed to stand on its own. No matter how good a record is or how well-received, musicians can’t help but make sequels. The album is completely different but also still the album. Every eusexua has an afterglow. Though we are born to die, we are promised paradise. The same themes are mined, remixed, subverted, and marketed as a continuation until the album cycle lemon runs dry, bitter, or both.

Rauw Alejandro’s a particular fan of this framework. Real fans remember both slices of Trap Cake. He followed up magnum opus Saturno with Playa Saturno, a forehead kiss of an album tack-on. Cosa Nuestra’s “chapter zero,” billed as a prequel to last year’s album, is four songs shorter than the original 18-track LP. In other words, it’s a full album of its own, with a largely new sound and focus, even if it’s meant to exist in the cigar-perfumed universe Rauw has been wearing vintage suits in for over a year now.

Where Cosa Nuestra channeled salsa romántica greats, Capítulo 0 taps into syncretism, ancestry, and Puerto Rican folk sounds. This includes bomba, the Afro-Puertorican genre rooted firmly in the drum that forms the backbone of several tracks on Capítulo 0, including swoon-worthy opening track “Carita Linda,” rife with shakers and a call-and-response that feels like godly invocation.

Despite Cosa Nuestra’s aesthetic, salsa wasn’t quite in the room with us on that release; here, it is relegated to the album’s three-part finale. “Callejón de los Secretos,” with Chilean-Mexican musician Mon Laferte, is a high-class duet out of an old-school lounge. Energetic “FALSEDAD” sees Rauw decry a past love to congas and salsa horns with the heartbroken mastery of Frankie Ruiz (whose “Tú Con El,” a crucial cover from this era, Rauw nods to in the lyrics). Closer “Mirando Al Cielo” is an ode to Puerto Rico that evokes the mysticism coursing through Capítulo 0: “Mary is taking care of me/Yemayá is opening the seas,” he sings in Spanish, conjuring a divine protection that’s in line with salsa classics since the genre’s onset and closing the Cosa Nuestra era with his best vocals to date. That it feels a little late doesn’t lessen the impact, or execution.

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Operatic Spanish Content, 'Culpa Nuestra': Banijay at Iberseries
TV & Streaming

Operatic Spanish Content, ‘Culpa Nuestra’: Banijay at Iberseries

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Steve Matthews is attending the fifth edition of Iberseries & Platino Industria in Madrid this week to bring a taste of superindie Banijay Entertainment, the France-headquartered international content production and distribution giant behind such hits as Survivor, Black Mirror, Peaky Blinders, MasterChef and Big Brother, to the gathering for Spanish- and Portuguese-language content producers and other attendees.

Hired in early 2023 as content partnerships executive in the company’s central scripted department, the former executive of Octagon Films in Dublin and consulting producer on all three seasons of Showtime’s The Borgias was promoted to the role of head of scripted, creative — partnered with Johannes Jensen as head of scripted, business — in January.

In a Tuesday “Spotlight: Banijay” session, Matthews and Pilar Blasco, CEO of Banijay Iberia, will share insight into their content strategy and collaborations across markets.

Ahead of his Iberseries appearance, Matthews talked to THR about the appeal of Spanish-language content, its “operatic” quality, Banijay’s Spanish hits and what’s next.

Spanish-language content has, in recent years, shown such broad appeal around the world. How does it fit into Banijay’s scripted strategy?

At Banijay, we’re doing 1,000 hours across 60 labels as the biggest scripted producer in Europe. I have this helicopter analogy, which still prevails. There are now more people in the helicopter, and we’re a little bit tighter and a little bit more disciplined on what the helicopter is there to do. But the helicopter flies to a production banner, and we open the door and ask if they need anything. If they do, we try to help. If they don’t, we go on to the next banner.

So, to stick with this metaphor, we go across the labels, we open the door, we look down, and we say: “Hi, guys. Do you need some help with a tax incentive? Do you need some help getting that agent in New York to call you back about that book? Do you need me to help you set up a writer’s room? Do you need help to get that French format?

Banijay has made a very big thing out of lots of little things. So the game and strategy is all about maintaining the ability of the production companies to work in their markets, tell the stories that they’re specialists in, maintain their creative identities, and not get in the way too much, but help and connect if we can. It’s about [managing] the whole scale of it.

English-language content has certain advantages. The U.K. remains our biggest territory, but Spain and Italy are close behind.

Banijay’s content partnerships executive Steve Matthews

Courtesy of Banijay

There are four primary scripted companies that we have in Spain. There’s Pokeepsie Films, founded by [director, screenwriter and producer] Álex de la Iglesia, who I love, having already done 30 Coins with him. He makes big, bold, theatrical stuff. We also have Diagonal TV, which has done great premium stuff, such as The Patients of Dr. García. There’s Dlo [Producciones], which produces brilliant genre content, such as [Netflix series] The Gardener. And there is the lovely Portcabo up in Galicia, which is doing unpretentious, excellent, well-crafted crime stuff. So, our Spanish production businesses are not a homogeneous thing. It’s not just one thing, and I think that’s how it’s kind of endured.

What do you see as the drivers behind the global success of Spanish content in recent years?

For the rise of Spain over the last 10 years, distribution comes in. A third of the world speaks Spanish. So there’s an automatic advantage there for Spanish content. Also, in Spain, the regulatory environment is great, there is an excellent tax systems. All of these are conducive to encouraging the excellent storytelling in Spain.

It’s a pretentious thing to say, but I think any movement in art usually has elements of finance or technology. However, I think it’s never just that. There’s also been a burst of storytelling that’s come out of Spain. When I first started in Spain in 2016, I was reading scripts and saying to a colleague, “These scripts, they don’t have any subtext. And he said: “You don’t understand, Steve, we don’t have subtext.” And I said, “Oh, I see, you write in a different way.” There’s no ”set it up really slowly and hold back the motivations.” At the start of a Spanish story, you just go. You go to the front of the stage and sing.

It’s not like Tony Soprano where you wonder: “Is he happy or is he sad?” There’s something operatic in Spanish storytelling. And I think that’s something that has fit these times — of people wanting something a little bit less pretentious, a little bit brash. There’s an operatic storytelling that just fits the time.

That may explain why I have noticed friends getting fully drawn in and really caring about characters in more and more Spanish dramas. One recently mentioned that years ago they used to watch a Spanish show only here and there for the sun and fun and, I hate to say it, the pretty people. I wonder if more opportunities to watch such content has allowed a fan base to go deeper and look beyond the surface?

Yes, you can go beyond Spain to Mexico and Latin America and the telenovela. I have watched some of the shows from our colleagues in Brazil. With the telenovela, it’s wrong to think of it as bright and colorful, just pretty people, and that’s the only reason you watch. It does have all of those things, but it’s also got a joyful operatic story. Otherwise, you wouldn’t sit and watch 40 episodes of it.

So, pretty people and sunshine are a superficial symptom of something much deeper. I love working with these guys. They are great and have this boldness as well. As things were already slowing down and a bubble was about to burst heading into the run-up to 2020, I was working with Alex, and these scripts were coming through. Reading them, I was like: “We can’t do this, can we?” And you know, you’re in a good place when you’re reading a script, thinking that, and they are letting us do this. There’s a confidence there. And there’s a naughtiness about them as well, which I think is good.

‘The Gardener’

Since we just mentioned Latin America, and co-productions have been one key topic at Iberseries & Platino Industry, are there co-productions between Banijay production banners in Spain and Latin America in the works?

Over the last two to three years, co-production is very much back on the table, and you find it’s the Swedes, the Dutch, the Central Europeans. It’s the smaller companies and markets that have a kind of memory for what it was like before the streaming boom, because they have to as there isn’t enough money like in the bigger territories, which sometimes stay a little bit more within themselves.

However, that’s one of the things that we’re building. Are there a lot of developments between Spain and Europe and Latin America? No, not as many as I would like to see. But equally, it’s a mistake to assume that they are the exact same countries just because they share a language. Because their Spanish is actually different, and Brazil is, of course, Portuguese, so it’s a completely different language, a completely different thing. So you can make a kind of lazy assumption. But it’s not quite as simple as that. And that’s the game for us. It’s really about how much to push in, how much to encourage? How much glue should there be between the whole thing to get the balance correct?

What are some of the Spanish Banijay shows you can highlight?

The big one really is the third in the Culpa trilogy, which comes out [on Prime] soon from Pokeepsie. So that’s been for us, a really good example of a new [hit] from a company known for horror and psychological thrillers. I think the success comes from how they have worked with the same kind of theatricality. That is why they have been so successful. So that’s the big one coming up.

We’re also very happy with an important show for us, even though it’s relatively small compared to the scale of the stuff from Pokeepsie. Weiss & Morales is made by Portocabo. It is a cop show that we’re proud of because it’s a pure, old-fashioned, two-territory co-production with ZDF in Germany and RTVE in Spain. It’s a German cop and a Spanish cop investigating crimes. Again, it’s unpretentious, and there’s a lot of business entrepreneurialism there as well.

‘Weiss & Morales’

And Dlo has [psychological thriller series] La Caza, which has traveled to France and had remakes.

You know what I love about Spain? It’s not stuck. They do their book adaptations, but also more. Diagonal did Dr. García and those literary and historical things, but then Dlo did The Gardener, a cracking little contemporary psychological thriller with all this kind of Hitchcockian vibe to it, a big show on Netflix.

And there’s more coming from all those guys.

Beyond your on-stage appearance, any other big plans for Iberseries and Madrid?

They have asked me to meet with some young writers. I always meet with young writers and really read their pitches, so I’ll do some of those sessions. I take opportunities to be on the road, and I use those very much for face time with the labels. We’re very spread out, so the more we get to know each other, the better.

We do lots of panels and talks and discussions and pitches and showcases, but we also all get together and say, “Hey, you’ve got a thriller. Have you met the guys from the Nordics? These guys have got a great idea.” There are two projects in development right now between territories, which came entirely out of that. So I take any opportunity to go and see them and ask: “What do you need? What are you working on? Can I help you with that?”

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Promo Trailer for 'Nuestra Tierra' aka 'Landmarks' Doc from Argentina
Hollywood

Promo Trailer for ‘Nuestra Tierra’ aka ‘Landmarks’ Doc from Argentina

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Promo Trailer for ‘Nuestra Tierra’ aka ‘Landmarks’ Doc from Argentina

by Alex Billington
September 6, 2025
Source: YouTube

“The Argentinian State trained me to do that.” The Match Factory has revealed a festival promo trailer for a documentary film called Landmarks, also known as Nuestra Tierra (which translates to Our Earth). This just premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival and will be screening at tons of other festivals this fall: San Sebastian, Toronto, New York, Vancouver, and London soon. In 2009, a man & two accomplices try to evict members of the Indigenous community of Chuschagasta in northern Argentina. Claiming ownership of the land & armed with guns, they kill the community’s leader, Javier Chocobar. The murder is caught on video. It takes nine years of protests before court proceedings are finally opened in 2018 – director Lucrecia Martel started filming in order to make this doc. During all this time, the killers have remained free. The film combines the voices and photographs of the community with vérité courtroom footage to explore the long history of colonialism & land dispossession that led up to this crime. A fly on the wall doc that captures the lawsuit and realities of trying to get real justice in a broken world. It is still seeking proper distribution.

Here’s the festival promo trailer (+ poster) for Lucrecia Martel’s doc Nuestra Tierra, from YouTube:

Nuestra Tierra Poster

Via NYFF: “In October 2009, Javier Chocobar, a member of the indigenous Chuchagasta community in northwest Argentina’s Tucumán Province, tried to defend himself & his people from being forcibly evicted from their land by a local landowner and two former police officers. As a result, the 68-year-old Chocobar was shot and killed, and two other community members were wounded. In her expansive and enlightening first feature documentary, filmmaker Lucrecia Martel takes a sweeping approach to this tragic true story, triangulating the murder trial of the three men, the lives of Chocobar and his fellow Chuchagasta people, and the centuries-old, colonialist legacy of land and property theft across [all of] Latin America. With a ravishing, at times vertiginous visual approach to filming the natural beauty of the contested land, Martel pays cinematic tribute to people whom others [have always] systematically tried to erase from history.” 🇦🇷

Nuestra Tierra, also titled Landmarks, is directed by acclaimed Argentinian filmmaker Lucrecia Martel, director of the films La ciénaga, The Holy Girl, The Headless Woman, and Zama previously, plus tons of other shorts. Produced by Rei Pictures (Benjamin Domenech, Santiago Gallelli, Matias Roveda), Louverture Films (Joslyn Barnes), Piano (Julio Chavezmontes), Pio & Co (Sandrine Dumas, Marie-Pierre Macia, Claire Gadea), Snowglobe (Katrin Pors, Mikkel Jersi), Lemming Film (Leontine Petit, Erik Glijnis). This initially premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival in the Out of Competition section; it also plays at the Toronto, New York, London Film Fests next. No US release date is set yet – stay tuned for updates. Who’s intrigued?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, To Watch, Trailer

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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