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DISTRIBUTION Spain

Paco León releases Carmina o revienta simultaneously in cinemas, on Internet, and on DVD

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- The actor-turned-director’s debut film will be distributed online via Filmin, on DVD via Cameo, and in cinemas via Jaleo Films.

There has been much talk in the film sector lately about a crisis in distribution for Spanish productions. Poor box office results for films like Extraterrestrial [+see also:
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trailer
interview: Nacho Vigalondo
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]
by Nacho Vigalondo, in this case despite the great hype it generated online, has led many to believe that the problem is a rigid distribution system. According to this argument, bad distribution means many national productions are unable to compete with foreign superproductions and exploitation in cinemas is often a disaster, which drags down all other sales, especially in view of the required wait between a film’s release in cinemas and its other releases.

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Director Paco León, who is better known as an actor on television, has rebelled again this situation by deciding to release his first film, the fake documentary Carmina o revienta [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
, simultaneously in cinemas, on the Internet, and on DVD on July 5 at very democratic prices (€ 5.95 per DVD and € 1.95 to see the film online).

Filmin will be in charge of the film’s online distribution, while Cameo will distribute it on DVD. The film’s Sevilla-based production company Jaleo Films will release it in cinemas. Alta Films had originally acquired the rights to distribute the film in cinemas after the Málaga Film Festival, where Carmina o revienta was well received by critics and public alike, and where it won Best Actress, an Audience Award, and a Jury Special Mention). But when they found out about the director’s distribution plans, they decided to withdraw from the agreement.

“If I don’t do this with my film, who will try this experiment?” León told El País. His new release strategy is only possible because Carmina o revienta did not receive aid from the ICAA, who specify that there must be a wait of at least three months between a film’s release in cinemas and its release on DVD.

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(Translated from Spanish)

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