Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Spanish science fiction starts mid 19th century; depending on how it is defined, Lunigrafía (1855) from M. Krotse or Una temporada en el más bello de los planetas from Tirso Aguimana de Veca — a trip to Saturn published in 1870-1871, but written in the 1840s — is the first science fiction novel.
Eva is a 2011 science fiction film directed by Kike Maíllo. It had its world premiere on 7 September 2011 at the 68th Venice International Film Festival, where it was screened out of competition. The film stars Daniel Brühl, Marta Etura, Lluís Homar and Alberto Ammann.
Spanish animated science fiction films (5 P) C. Spanish science fiction comedy films (1 C, 10 P) Spanish science fiction comedy-drama films (4 P) D.
Stranded is a 2001 English-language Spanish science fiction film about a fictional first crewed mission to Mars.It stars Vincent Gallo and Maria de Medeiros, and was directed by Spanish filmmaker and actress María Lidón (credited in the English version of the movie as "Luna"), with screenplay by Spanish science fiction author Juan Miguel Aguilera.
In 2019, she compiled, together with Teresa López Pellisa , an anthology of science fiction stories by Spanish authors. [ 5 ] Más allá de Concordia , published in 2023, is a utopia of an unperfect utopian society in construction which borrows from the universes of Le Guin and StarTrek but also her own novel El árbol de Sefarad published in ...
Gabriela Bustelo is one of the few Spanish women who have written science fiction. [5] Her second novel Planeta Hembra (RBA, 2001), located in New York, is a dystopia that envisaged —almost two decades ago— the underlying conflict between women and men that in the 21st century has become the MeToo Movement as a global battle of the sexes.
He published nine novels, three collections and more than twenty short stories and novellas, some considered classics of Spanish science fiction, [3] and was awarded in 1991 with the Spanish science fiction literary Alberto Magno Prize, [5] and two times, in 1994 and 2002, with the Ignotus Award. [6]
This page was last edited on 31 December 2018, at 22:12 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.