
Spanish film director and producer, born in Zaragoza. He studied law in his hometown and debuted as a film critic in the newspaper El Heraldo de Aragón. In Madrid, he joined the Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográficas. He exerted great influence on the medium from his teaching at the Escuela Oficial de Cinematografía. In 1967 he founded the production company El Imán, Cine y Televisión, with which he has financed his own projects and those of other filmmakers. Of his personal work, two films stand out: Furtivos (1975), Golden Shell at the San Sebastian Festival and a great success for its opposition to the limits of censorship at the beginning of the Spanish Transition, and Leo (2000), which won the Goya for best director. However, both his initial commissions, such as the spaghetti western Brandy (1964) and the crime film Crimen de doble filo (1965), and the controversial later films Tata mía (1986) and Niño Nadie (1996), have had little repercussion. Between 1994 and 1998 he was president of the Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España (Spanish Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences). In 2001 he was elected full member of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and in 2002 he was awarded the Premio Nacional de Cinematografía.

Ilona Arrives with the Rain
1996 · as Alcántara

La adúltera
1975 · as Médico

Everyone Off to Jail
1993 · as Capellan

My Dearest Senorita
1972 · as Médico (uncredited)

Poachers
1975 · as Gobernador

Un, dos, tres, al escondite inglés
1969 · as Tio Prudencio

Snakes and Ladders
1965 · as Cliente del café (uncredited)

Somnambulists
1978 · as Director de la biblioteca

Enrique Herreros
2011 · as Self - Filmmaker

Por la gracia de Luis
2009 · as Himself

Arrebatados: recordando a Iván Zulueta
2010

Misadventure
1988 · as Alcántara

Cuentos para una escapada
1981