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The story takes place during the 17th century in the [[Spanish Empire]]. Diego Alatriste is a soldier in the service of [[King Philip IV of Spain]], during the [[Eighty Years War]]. The story begins in the Netherlands, where the [[tercio]] of Diego Alatriste fights against the Dutch during the [[Dutch Revolt]]. Lope Balboa (father of Íñigo and friend of the captain) is killed here. Diego decides to return to Madrid where he receives the young Íñigo Balboa in his care.
The story takes place during the 17th century in the [[Spanish Empire]]. Diego Alatriste is a soldier in the service of [[King Philip IV of Spain]], during the [[Eighty Years War]]. The story begins in the Netherlands, where the [[tercio]] of Diego Alatriste fights against the Dutch during the [[Dutch Revolt]]. Lope Balboa (father of Íñigo and friend of the captain) is killed here. Diego decides to return to Madrid where he receives the young Íñigo Balboa in his care.


He is hired, along with a Sicilian assassin named Gualtiero Malatesta to kill the [[Prince of Wales]] (future [[King Charles I of England]]) and his companion, the [[Duke of Buckingham]]. The job is contracted by Emilio Bocanegra and Luis de Alquézar (uncle of Íñigo's love interest - Angélica de Alquézar). Alatriste finally returns to the Netherlands in 1624 (although the movie says it's 1625) and participates in the final battles leading to [[Siege of Breda (1624)|Breda's surrender]]. After the return to Spain, Íñigo wants to elope with Angélica, but she gets cold feet at the last moment. Alatriste has a romance with actress María de Castro. Because she was disappointed that failed to marry him, she became the lover of Philip IV. And Alatristeh ends up crossing swords with Guadalmedina, a friend of the king. In the end, the object of their attention falls ill with [[syphilis]]. The duel with his friend Martín Saldaña and the punishment of Íñigo in the galleys are part of the film's spectacular ending.
He is hired, along with a Sicilian assassin named Gualtiero Malatesta to kill the [[Prince of Wales]] (future [[King Charles I of England]]) and his companion, the [[Duke of Buckingham]]. The job is contracted by Emilio Bocanegra and Luis de Alquézar (uncle of Íñigo's love interest - Angélica de Alquézar). Alatriste finally returns to the Netherlands in 1624 (although the movie says it's 1625) and participates in the final battles leading to [[Siege of Breda (1624)|Breda's surrender]]. After the return to Spain, Íñigo wants to elope with Angélica, but she gets cold feet at the last moment. Alatriste has a romance with actress María de Castro. Because she was disappointed that failed to marry him, she became the lover of Philip IV. And Alatriste ends up crossing swords with Guadalmedina, a friend of the king. In the end, the object of their attention falls ill with [[syphilis]]. The duel with his friend Martín Saldaña and the punishment of Íñigo in the galleys are part of the film's spectacular ending.


The last scenes are at the [[Battle of Rocroi]] (May 1643), described in the last book of the ''[[Captain Alatriste|The Adventures of Captain Alatriste]]'' saga. During the battle [[Abel Moreno Gómez]]'s "La Madrugá" is playing as the defeated army's march and this is where it is assumed that the old Captain Diego Alatriste dies.
The last scenes are at the [[Battle of Rocroi]] (May 1643), described in the last book of the ''[[Captain Alatriste|The Adventures of Captain Alatriste]]'' saga. During the battle [[Abel Moreno Gómez]]'s "La Madrugá" is playing as the defeated army's march and this is where it is assumed that the old Captain Diego Alatriste dies.

Revision as of 18:05, 6 January 2016

Alatriste
poster for Alatriste
Directed byAgustín Díaz Yanes
Written byAgustín Díaz Yanes
Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Produced byÁlvaro Augustín
Antonio Cardenal
StarringViggo Mortensen
Elena Anaya
CinematographyPaco Femenia
Edited byJosé Salcedo
Music byRoque Baños
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • 1 September 2006 (2006-09-01)
Running time
145 minutes
CountrySpain
LanguagesSpanish
Dutch

Alatriste is a 2006 Spanish historical film directed by Agustín Díaz Yanes, based on the main character of a series of novels written by Arturo Pérez-Reverte, The Adventures of Captain Alatriste ([Las aventuras del Capitán Alatriste] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)).

The film, which stars Viggo Mortensen, is the second most expensive Spanish language film ever made in Spain (about €24 million – US$30 million); only preceded by Agora. It portrays Spain of the 17th century using both fictional and real characters. Twentieth Century Fox has bought the rights to the film.[1][2][3][4]

Plot

The story takes place during the 17th century in the Spanish Empire. Diego Alatriste is a soldier in the service of King Philip IV of Spain, during the Eighty Years War. The story begins in the Netherlands, where the tercio of Diego Alatriste fights against the Dutch during the Dutch Revolt. Lope Balboa (father of Íñigo and friend of the captain) is killed here. Diego decides to return to Madrid where he receives the young Íñigo Balboa in his care.

He is hired, along with a Sicilian assassin named Gualtiero Malatesta to kill the Prince of Wales (future King Charles I of England) and his companion, the Duke of Buckingham. The job is contracted by Emilio Bocanegra and Luis de Alquézar (uncle of Íñigo's love interest - Angélica de Alquézar). Alatriste finally returns to the Netherlands in 1624 (although the movie says it's 1625) and participates in the final battles leading to Breda's surrender. After the return to Spain, Íñigo wants to elope with Angélica, but she gets cold feet at the last moment. Alatriste has a romance with actress María de Castro. Because she was disappointed that failed to marry him, she became the lover of Philip IV. And Alatriste ends up crossing swords with Guadalmedina, a friend of the king. In the end, the object of their attention falls ill with syphilis. The duel with his friend Martín Saldaña and the punishment of Íñigo in the galleys are part of the film's spectacular ending.

The last scenes are at the Battle of Rocroi (May 1643), described in the last book of the The Adventures of Captain Alatriste saga. During the battle Abel Moreno Gómez's "La Madrugá" is playing as the defeated army's march and this is where it is assumed that the old Captain Diego Alatriste dies.

The plot of the film has elements from each of the five books published up to the premiere, and it maintains the same storyline for the main characters. It includes excerpts from the future books of the saga.

Cast

Antonio Resines, originally slated to appear as Saldaña, almost retired from the entire movie due to a traffic accident; however, he makes a cameo appearance in the Battle of Rocroi as a musketeer officer.

The film was released on 1 September 2006.

Awards and nominations

Alatriste filming in La Caleta beach, Cadiz, Spain

At the 21st Goya Awards the film was awarded and nominated for the following categories:

Category
(Spanish name)
Actor/Actress Result
Best Film
(Mejor película)
Nominated
Best Lead Actor
(Mejor actor Principal)
Viggo Mortensen Nominated
Best Supporting Actor
(Mejor actor de reparto)
Juan Echanove Nominated
Best Supporting Actress
(Mejor actriz de reparto)
Ariadna Gil Nominated
Best Screenplay
(Mejor guión adaptado)
Agustín Díaz Yanes Nominated
Best Direction
(Mejor director)
Agustín Díaz Yanes Nominated
Best Production Supervision
(Mejor dirección de producción)
Cristina Zumárraga Winner
Best Musical Score
(Mejor música original)
Roque Baños Nominated
Best Production Design
(Mejor dirección artística)
Benjamín Fernández Winner
Best Costume Design
(Mejor diseño de vestuario)
Francesca Sartori Winner
Best Cinematography
(Mejor fotografía)
Paco Femenia Nominated
Best Editing
(Mejor montaje)
José Salgado Nominated
Best Make-Up and Hairstyles
(Mejor maquillaje y peluquería)
José Luis Pérez Nominated
Best Sound
(Mejor sonido)
Pierre Gamet Nominated
Best Special Effects
(Mejores effectos especiales)
Reyes Abades
Rafael Solorzano
Nominated

References

  1. ^ "Captain Alatriste: The Spanish Musketeer(2006)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  2. ^ "Alatriste (2006)". rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  3. ^ "Alatriste". amazon.com. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  4. ^ "Summer readings: Captain Alatriste by Arturo Pérez-Reverte". theguardian.com. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  • Alatriste at IMDb
  • ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› Alatriste at AllMovie
  • Official Arturo Pérez-Reverte's website Template:Es icon