San Sebastián Hails Spain’s Crime Series Boom, Debates Its Drivers
SAN SEBASTIAN — From when it began to incorporate Spanish TV series in its Official Selection – think 2017’s “The Plague” or 2020’s double whammy of “Patria” and “Riot Police” – San Sebastián has used its first Saturday to debate TV issues.
This time round, a panel highlighted crime series, featuring Movistar Plus+’s Susana Herreras, Laura Sarmiento, showrunner of Netflix hit “Intimacy” and lead writer on “Burning Body,” and Elías León Siminiani, co-creator of the 2017 docuseries “El caso Asunta (Operación Nenúfar)” which inspired the 2024 Netflix fiction series, “El Caso Asunta.”
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Six takes on the panel discussion:
Spanish Crime Series Boom
The panel was entitled in Spanish “The Spanish Crime Series Boom.” That seems an understatement. According to Variety research, through Sept. 13 this year, seven Spanish titles hit No. 1 on Netflix’s Global Non-English TV series charts, occupying the top-charting position for a total 15 of the period’s total 35 weeks. That’s a far better performance than any other non-English language country in the world: Korea (8 weeks), Japan (3) and France (2) trailed behind. Six of the seven series reaching global No. 1, accounting for a total 13 weeks at the top, were crime series or part crime series from heist dramedy “Berlin” to drug cartel drama “Gangs of Galicia” or gender abuse thriller “Raising Voices.” The crime series boom isn’t just Spanish. Fictionalized true crime series were up 39%, Sept. 2022 – Aug. 2023, compared to a year earlier, Virginie Mouseler observed at The Wit’s Fresh TV Fiction 2023 Mipcom showcase. That said, Spain’s case is still remarkable.
Streamer Drivers
“The arrival of the platforms changed everything,” said Siminiani. That cuts several ways. “The platforms allowed for budgets which didn’t exist before, which permitted longer series and far more investigation,” he said. Also, series creators began to include their process of investigation in the very content of titles, and these began to be made by investigator-creators with no formal legal training. That opened up access notably to the true crime genre, Siminiani argued. From two years or so back, platforms are also asking for sister titles, a fiction and docuseries. “The possibility to invent in a fiction series is now far broader than a decade ago. That’s a tectonic shift,” he said. One result is 2024 Netflix fiction series “El Caso Asunta,” one of Spain’s biggest global hits of this year.
True Crime Energizes Crime Fiction
If series now dramatize criminal procedure, the push and possibility of investigation is energizing others, to the better. Fran Araujo and Pepe Coira, lead writers of Movistar Plus+ crime series hits “Hierro” and “Rapa” “researched, read, created documentation before and during the writing. They let reality overturn what they were thinking, changing whole scenes, plots and characters,” said Herreras. “That’s very much Movistar Plus+. We don’t want our characters to be clones of foreign crime series, U.S., French or English attorneys. They have to be lawyers working here and from here. That’s only possible if you create voluntary links to reality.”
Character, Character
Beyond research, the key to a crime series, Sarmiento argued, is character. “Burning Body,” for example, is inspired by a real-life crime. The burning question, for Sarmiento, however, is “Why?” “There were things about the characters, their voraciousness for life, dissatisfaction, which seemed to me to be very human and recognizable,” she said at the panel. So why did such recognizable people, even if they were a little crazed, goes as far as murder? That’s what I wanted to explore.”
The Advantages of Crime Fiction
“Querer,” the biggest Movistar Plus+ series at the San Sebastián Festival this year, directed by Alauda Ruiz de Azúa, turns on a woman who after 30 years of a seemingly stable marriage, takes her husband to court, accusing him of three decades of sexual abuse. The series is fiction but inspired by “an amalgam of real-life cases,” said Herreras. “Fiction allows us to talk about highly polemical issues but shape and nuance them so that they are comprehensible,” she added. Depending on every case, fiction can give you more tools than non-fiction, Herreras argued, citing the case of Federation Studios’ London TV Screenings hit “Samber,” where from late ’80s Northern France, women are being sexually assaulted along the same road by the Samber River. It takes more than 30 years to catch a man. “Samber” portrays a society. It seems like a lot of time has passed, but it connects with current cases in France and indeed with “Querer.’”
Part Crime, and Real Crime?
France is proud of its “light crime” series – think “HPI” or “Tandem” with “Tom & Lola” another candidate, which mix women’s sleuth work with domestic life and may be set in a luminous South. Spain, however, has been mixing crime with other genres for years, as one way of filling 70-minutes of traditional prime time TV episodes. These now last 45 minutes, but the crime mix tradition lingers. “Elite,” for example, mixes one death per season, hot button issues and, especially in its earlier going, a lot of sex. Crime series splinters, indeed, into multiple sub-genres, the panelists observed. One is prominent at this year’s San Sebastián: Real Crime? In both Iciar Bollain’s “I’m Nevenka” and “Querer,” women have to prove that sexual harassment or abuse has occurred in a court of law. It’s no slam dunk.
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