Already a familiar face in world cinema thanks to fine performances in such films as Open Your Eyes and Talk to Her, Spanish actor Fele Mart?nez teetered on the brink of international success in the wake of work for such internationally recognized directors as Alejandro Amen?bar and Pedro Almod?var. Following his Goya-winning performance in filmmaker Amen?bar's chilling feature debut, Thesis, Mart?nez has successfully alternated between lesser-known Spanish features and major exports. A native of Alicante, Valencia, Spain, the aspiring actor studied his craft in Madrid, creating the Sex-Peare Theater troupe with a group of close friends and fellow students before moving into film with his role as a connoisseur of the macabre in Thesis. By taking a supporting character that might have otherwise been two-dimensional and turning him into an ever-evolving character that the audience could actually feel for, the rising star rightfully earned the Best New Actor Goya that was subsequently bestowed upon him. After having his girlfriend stolen by a handsome (at least momentarily) Eduardo Noriega in director Amen?bar's art-house hit Open Your Eyes (later remade in the U.S. as Vanilla Sky), Mart?nez spent the next few years carving a comfortable niche for himself in the realm of Spanish cinema. In 2000, Mart?nez stepped into the lead with a role in the Scream-inspired Spanish teen horror flick The Art of Dying, and in 2002, he essayed a pair of high-profile roles in both Jaume Balaguer?'s Darkness (set for release in the U.S. in 2004) and acclaimed director Almod?var's Talk to Her. With his role as the best friend of lead Gael Garc?a Bernal (Y Tu Mam? Tambi?n) in Almod?var's 2004 drama Bad Education, it seemed as if Mart?nez was finally poised for the international recognition that had previously eluded him among mainstream filmgoers. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Fele Martínez

Spain

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