Palomitas
Episode 7 descends into a dark, enchanted maze. We're discussing Guillermo del Toro's modern masterpiece, Pan's Labyrinth (2006), with our special guest, world-renowned expert Professor Ann Davies, Emeritus Professor of Spanish at the University of Stirling. In the brutal Spain of 1944, young Ofelia confronts the monstrous fascist Captain Vidal, her stepfather, and undertakes a terrifying quest in an ancient labyrinth for a mythical faun. Is she a lost princess of an underground realm, or is she crafting a fantasy to survive? A haunting fusion of historical drama and brutal fairy tale. We explore: * The two equally real (?) worlds: How del Toro makes the fantasy quest and the historical trauma of post-Civil War Spain feel intertwined and equally threatening. * Monsters as mirrors: From the child-eating Pale Man to Captain Vidal - decoding the film’s allegories for fascism, consumption, and patriarchal violence. * Obedience vs. Disobedience: How Ofelia’s key trait becomes the ultimate act of resistance against a regime obsessed with order and cleanliness. * A transnational haunting: What does a Mexican director bring to this specifically Spanish story, and why did this film about the maquis resonate with a global audience? * An ambiguous ending: Is Ofelia’s fate a tragic consolation or a hopeful victory? What does the film’s conclusion tell us about historical memory and resistance? Scholarship & further exploration cited in the episode: (For the books, ask your library - university and/or public - to buy a copy! Trust us: librarians are always eager for requests!) Davies, Ann, Deborah Shaw, and Dolores Tierney, eds. 2014. The Transnational Fantasies of Guillermo del Toro. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Davies, Ann. 2025. The Nightmares of Presence: Space and Place in Spanish Gothic and Horror Film. London: Bloomsbury. Orme, Jennifer. 2010. “Narrative Desire and Disobedience in Pan’s Labyrinth.” Marvels & Tales 24 (2): 219–234. Zipes, Jack. 2011. The Enchanted Screen: The Unknown History of Fairy-Tale Films. New York: Routledge. Film Recommendations: The Devil’s Backbone (Guillermo del Toro, 2001), The Spirit of the Beehive (Víctor Erice, 1973), The Orphanage (J.A. Bayona, 2007).
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