Spanish Masks of the King. Cinema on the Definition of Image of Philip of Spain in the British Isles (1554-1558)
Spanish
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24310/BAETICA.2021.vi41.12431Keywords:
Philip II, Mary Tudor, british isles, image, cinema, HistoryAbstract
In June of 1554, prince Philip of Spain embarked in La Coruña for the british isles, to marry Mary Tudor, Queen of England. Although the marriage barely lasted four years (1554-1558), the image of the future king of the Hispanic Monarchy would remain in popular memory, aggravated by Elizabethan propaganda and the continuous confrontation between the two monarchs. In this article we will analyze the vision that British cinematography has of this brief period of the reign of Mary and Philip, in order to trace the possible presence of a visual corpus that establishes a marked difference between this period and the reign of Elizabeth I. In this way, the study of audiovisual productions brings us closer to an analysis of the permanence of an anti-Philippine discourse, unalterable in the background, and adapted to the new media.
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