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Original Articles

Ocho apellidos vascos and the Comedy of Minor Differences

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Abstract

This article examines the content, contexts, and intertexts of the Spanish romantic comedy Ocho apellidos vascos (Dir. Emilio Martínez-Lázaro, 2014). The film was the Spanish box office smash of 2014, and indeed of all time: within one month of its release it had attracted more spectators than any film screened in Spain except for Avatar. Critics spoke of “a social phenomenon,” trying to account for its huge success with national audiences. That success, the critics understood, had something to do with the ethnicities of the film's two lovers—one Andalusian, the other Basque—and the setting of the film, a post-ETA Basque country. Finally, it was said, Spain was able to laugh at the longest-lasting historical trauma that it had endured in the post–civil war era, and by all accounts Basque audiences laughed along with the Spanish. In this article, we consider the ways in which the film makes use of comic conventions to broach problems of difference and conflict. The conflict in question is one that, until recently, has resolutely resisted comic treatment in Spanish film. However, as we demonstrate, Ocho apellidos vascos has not emerged in a vacuum but is, in fact, in dialogue with comic traditions that run from Berlanga to contemporary Basque television and the current trend of “post-humor” in Spanish and Catalan popular culture, particularly as disseminated on the Internet. If Ocho apellidos vascos has reached and satisfied such a wide audience in Spain, it is because it articulates a key message about regionalist and nationalist identifications in a post-ETA landscape. Drawing on psychoanalytical and other theories of humor and comedy, we show how the film is a careful work of compromise, eliding conflicts and dressing up minor differences as major ones.

Notes

1In addition to Clemente, Rafa summons up the following seven names: Gabilondo (Iñaki, journalist and television presenter), Urdangarin (Iñaki, Duke of Palma, son-in-law of former King Juan Carlos), Zubizarreta (Andoni, football goalie), Arguiñano (Karlos, television chef), Igartiburu (Anne, television presenter), Erentxun (Mikel, musician), and Otegi (Arnaldo, ETA and Herri Batasuna member).

2The “decompression” of the Basque problem was also evident in the local elections in Spain in May 2015. In these elections, the Partido Popular candidate for the Town Hall of Madrid, Esperanza Aguirre, attempted to use the formerly reliable strategy of associating the opposing candidates on the left with ETA, but the strategy notably failed, and Aguirre ultimately lost the majority control that the PP had long enjoyed in the city.

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