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Juan José Plans Martínez (February 28, 1943, Gijón, Asturias - February 24, 2014, Gijón, Asturias) was a Spanish writer, journalist, and radio and television announcer. He specialized as a writer in fantasy, horror, and science fiction, and published several collections of short stories and several radio and TV adaptations of classics in ...
Who Can Kill a Child? has gained a cult following over the years since its initial release, and is now considered a cult classic. [2] It later appeared at number 86 in Slant Magazine ' s list of "The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time". [8] Released in 2012, Come Out and Play is a Mexican remake that closely mirrors the plot of the original.
[4] Various real-life events from the Spanish Civil War provided inspiration. For example, the line "If I can shoot rabbits/then I can shoot fascists" is attributed to a remark made by a man to his brother who signed up with the Republican fighters. This was originally quoted in the book Miners Against Fascism by Hywel Francis.
Because anos and años mean "years" in Portuguese and Spanish respectively, these words appear in countless toponyms and titles: All pages with titles containing anos; All pages with titles containing años
Homicide, according to the Spanish Criminal Code of 1995, is a crime which contravenes the legal right to "independent human life". It is found in article 138 which states: "Whoever kills another shall be convicted of manslaughter, punishable with a sentence of imprisonment from ten to fifteen years".
Polemical documentary about the famous Spanish poet Leopoldo María Panero and his family; a sequel was made, Después de tantos años, directed by Ricardo Franco in 1994 El hombre perseguido por un O.V.N.I.
from Spanish caldera meaning "cauldron" from Latin caldaria, "cooking pot." California place name first seen in print in 1510 Spanish novel 'Las sergas de Esplandián' by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo camarilla from camarilla, "small room" diminutive of cámara "room" < latin camara. camino from camino a path or road, from Celtic cammanos "road ...
Fleeing from the threat of imprisonment, Blanco lived in hiding for almost a year in an abandoned shelter in Ermida. He reappeared later in public with a false passport using the name Antonio Gómez, a native of Nogueira, Portugal; and lived in the small village of Rebordechao in the district of Vilar de Barrio for at least a year.