(Europa Press). November bids farewell to theaters with a long-awaited Disney premiere, the sequel of Vaiana which arrives eight years after the release of the successful animated film. The lineup also includes the premieres of three Spanish films, Desmontando a Lucía, Por donde pasa el silencio and Pídeme lo que quieras, as well as the historical drama El ministro de propaganda (The Minister of Propaganda). Directed by David Derrick Jr., Vaiana 2 brings to the big screen a new adventure of the stubborn daughter of Chief Tui of Motunui Island, who joins the demigod Maui on an exciting voyage along with a crew of unlikely sailors. After receiving an unexpected call from her ancestors, Vaiana must travel to the distant seas of Oceania and enter dangerous lost waters. In the original version, Vaina will once again be voiced by Auli’i Cravalho, while Dwayne Johnson will return as the irresistible Maui. The film features music by Grammy winners Abigail Barlow and Emily Bear, Mark Mancina and Opetaia Foa’i. Directed by Alberto Utrera and starring Hugo Silva, Susana Abaitua and Julián Villagrán, Desmontando a Lucía, a thriller with comic overtones in which the protagonist is arrested driving her boyfriend’s car at full speed, dazed and bloody. After a weekend at the beach with him and her best friend, they are both missing. Lucia only remembers a “small” argument that ended with a broken bottle on her boyfriend’s head, but that’s all. Ask Me Whatever You Want is a love story based on the successful best seller of the same name, written by Megan Maxwell, in which the protagonist is a normal girl who has a job she is passionate about, very good friends and a charming father, but her life changes radically the day she meets Eric Zimmerman, owner of the company where she works.
Her relationship with Eric is about to completely dynamite her life. Lucía Alemany directs this film starring Gabriela Andrada, Alicia Bercán, Joel Bosqued, Mario Ermito, Celia Freijeiro, Lucas Fuica, Iñigo Galiano, Alex Hafner, Fernando Oyagüez and Alba Ribas. Starring siblings Antonio, Javier and María Araque, Sandra Romero‘s debut feature film Por donde pasa el silencio, a family story in which Antonio is forced to return to Ecija from Madrid, where he lives, in the middle of the Andalusian Holy Week. With this return to the family home, Antonio goes back to the life he left there. What he does not know is whether he will need to stay there forever or whether he will be able to return to the path he has chosen. Joachim Lang directs The Minister of Propaganda, a film about how Nazi propaganda was created by Goebbels, the minister in charge of generating public support for the Holocaust and for the war that was about to begin. A master manipulator with great powers of seduction, he convinced the German people that only one person could make them great again: Adolf Hitler. Based on the novel of the same name by Narcís Oller, Escanyapobres is set in the late nineteenth century with the arrival of the train to an isolated village where Oleguer, a shady usurer with shady business, expropriates and takes the farmhouse of Cileta and her family. The young peasant girl will do everything she can to get her house back, even if it means following in the shady footsteps of the usurer. Bird is a dramatic film written and directed by Andrea Arnold and starring Nykiya Adams, Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski. In the film, 12-year-old Bailey lives with her single father Bug and brother Hunter in a squat in north Kent. The lineup is completed with Winnie the Pooh: The Bloody Forest, the film that picks up the baton from Diabolik 3, directed by Marco Manetti and Antonio Manetti. It is the horror version of the classic children’s tale.