Benito Zambrano
- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Born in the South of Spain, Benito Zambrano first studied drama
for three years with a view to becoming a theater director. He then
worked for the Spanish television as a photographer and a camera
operator. After a while, he felt the urge to turn to movie-making. This
was the early 1990s and, as there was no film school in Spain yet, he
was awarded a fellowship to study at the San Antonio de Los Banõs, in
Havana, Cuba. That event changed his life. He who, by his own
admission, did not know anything about film making, spent two wonderful
years there and not only did he learn the ropes of his trade but
inspiration visited him as well, allowing him to write three scripts
and direct a short
The Charm of the Full Moon (1995).
Back in Spain, Zambrano had difficulty in finding a producer for his
first feature film, but after two long years, he was finally backed by
'Antonio P. Perez', who did not shy away at such 'unbusinesslike'
material as _Solas(1999)_. A bold but nice
move since this sensitive story of a woman at bay proved a hit in Spain
as well as a favorite of the festival circuit and of film critics.
Since then the gifted but uncompromising director has made - besides a
TV series - only two films, both of which full of humanity:
Habana Blues (2005), the portrait of
two Cuban musicians, and
The Sleeping Voice (2011), a war
drama.