Spanish filmmaker José Luis Bora died today in Madrid at age 83, after a long battle witht throat cancer. Regarded as the godfather of Spanish cinema even though he directed only 9 films, he was also was a producer, writer and distributor as well as a teacher and historian. His classics include Tata Mine (1986), Poachers (1975) and Hay Que Mater A B and other titles such as his last film Leo which earned the Goya award for directing. Poachers, a powerful rural-set drama about a possessive mother and her mentally challenged child, is widely considered a masterpiece and a pioneering work of post-Franco Spanish cinema. Borau also made his mark on Spanish cinema as a producer and writer with films such as Un Dos, Tres Al Escondite Ingles (1969), Mi Qquerida Señorita (1972), Camada Negra (1977) and El monosabio (1977). He wrote and directed one Euro-western Ride and Kill (1964) with Alex Nicol and Robert Hundar. Juan Antonio Bayona, director of the upcoming The Impossible, was a pupil of Borau described him as “a great director and a great person.” From his debut in 1965 with Brandy, an early spaghetti western, Borau was known for making genre films full of passion and twisted plots. He was also the writer of My Dearest Senorita (1972), a film by Jaime de Armiñán that was nominated for an Oscar and portrayed the ignorance in some provincial areas of Spain through the tragic story of a man who was raised as a woman and doesn’t know his true identity. An influential scholar and intellectual, he was also author of an well-regarded Spanish Cinema dictionary. The Spanish Royal Academy just announced the creation of a new annual prize in Borau’s honor to recognize the best Spanish-language screenplay.


What I like about this site is that you would mention the passing of this director. I have not heard of him before, but because of this posting, I will definitely check out his films. He sounds like a very interesting man and filmmaker.
RIP. José Luis was a great person, generous, genuine, and truly in love with films. He was an extraordinary and rigorously deep filmmaker and a fabulous master of the craft. He gave me my first job in America during the production of “On The Line” and his help was crucial for me to get into USC’s Peter Stark Program. I will be forever grateful I met, learned from and worked with Borau. He knew everything, in great depth, about the masterpieces of early cinema, and filmmakers like Alex Korda, Jean Negulesco, Buñuel… During the time I worked for him, he took me to see many timeless films, in an old theatre on Wilshire Boulevard near downtown. Thanks to him I discovered the classics, from“The Thin Man” series (one of his favorites), to Preston Sturges’ “Sullivan’s Travels” to Erich von Stroheim’s “Greed.” His insights and profound understanding of the art of cinema were second to none. When he left America, in financial tatters after the fiasco of “On The Line,” I was already an executive at Universal Pictures, and, keenly aware how much I owed him, I asked him how I could possibly repay him. He told me, simply, “When you are my age — he was 55 at that time — help a young filmmaker, like I did with you.” Even though I have tried to fulfill that mandate, striving to help many Latinos to break into the business, I feel I will never be able to fully repay Borau for the generosity and mentorship he showed me 30 years ago. I am sure he is now talking films with Wilder and Lubitsch, and flirting with Gene Tierney and Paulette Goddard, with whom he was forever infatuated.