Netflix is turning ‘One Hundred Years of… | Little White Lies

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Net­flix is turn­ing One Hun­dred Years of Soli­tude’ into a miniseries

06 Mar 2019

Words by Charles Bramesco

Monochrome portrait of a man wearing a sign on his head displaying text in an unfamiliar script.
Monochrome portrait of a man wearing a sign on his head displaying text in an unfamiliar script.
The Span­ish-lan­guage show will be the first filmed ver­sion of Gabriel Gar­cía Márquez’s lit­er­ary classic.

In the future, all con­tent will be on Net­flix. It seems like there’s noth­ing their mon­ey can’t buy, not a res­ur­rec­tion of cin­e­ma history’s most fabled lost film and not a long-for­bid­den adap­ta­tion of a lit­er­ary masterwork.

The Hol­ly­wood Reporter announced this morn­ing that the lat­est feath­er in the stream­ing giant’s cap would be a minis­eries take on Gabriel Gar­cía Márquez’s land­mark nov­el One Hun­dred Years of Solitude’.

It will be the first filmed ver­sion of Marquez’s nov­el, which he had guard­ed from pro­duc­ers in Hol­ly­wood and Spain alike until his death in 2014. Marquez’s liv­ing sons, Rodri­go Gar­cía and Gon­za­lo Gar­cía Bar­cho, felt secure in going against these wishes.

The THR sto­ry includes a quote from the sons: For decades our father was reluc­tant to sell the film rights to Cien Anos de Soledad’ because he believed that it could not be made under the time con­straints of a fea­ture film, or that pro­duc­ing it in a lan­guage oth­er than Span­ish would not do it justice.”

Net­flix has assuaged these con­cerns by expand­ing the run time to series length – though whether the project will be ongo­ing or a minis­eries has not been estab­lished, per­haps to leave open the option for more in case of suc­cess – and retain­ing its orig­i­nal language.

One Hun­dred Years of Soli­tude’ recounts the his­to­ry of the Buen­dia fam­i­ly across sev­en gen­er­a­tions, weav­ing an epic nar­ra­tive tapes­try from the found­ing of their fic­ti­tious Colom­bian home­town to the present. Its flights of mag­i­cal-real­ist fan­cy and heartrend­ing melo­dra­ma still cap­ti­vate lit­er­a­ture stu­dents today.

The series con­tin­ues Netflix’s efforts to get a stronger foothold in Spain’s enter­tain­ment econ­o­my, which have come to a head with their planned open­ing of a new local pro­duc­tion hub in the coun­try. If any of the cre­ative per­son­nel describes the project as more of a hun­dred-hour movie,” how­ev­er, may God help them.

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