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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/el_crimen_de_cuenca.jpg]]
2
3->''When I told the truth, you didn't believe me. But when I lied, [[KangarooCourt they]] did.''
4->--'''León'''
5
6''The Cuenca Crime'' (original title: ''El Crimen de Cuenca'') is a classic 1979 Spanish [[CrimeAndPunishmentTropes Crime And Punishment]] film with a twist: There is a lot of punishment, but the crime [[MiscarriageOfJustice is not a crime at all]].
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8The film is [[BasedOnATrueStory based on the Real-Life]] "[[BadCopIncompetentCop investigation]]" of the 1910 disappearance of simple shepherd José María Grimaldos a.k.a. ''El Cepa'' ("The Stump") in a small village of Cuenca province. When a dying landowner accusses his two employees, Gregorio and León, of murdering Grimaldos, the newly appointed HangingJudge, Isasa, takes upon himself to make them confess by all means possible. By this we mean the most horrifically graphic ColdBloodedTorture. During their ordeal, Gregorio and León are broken both in body and spirit, lose everything, and are compelled to confess in order to avoid the death penalty, all while believing that their once best friend roped them into paying for a crime they didn't commit.
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10Considering its production and intended release in 1979, shortly after the end of the [[UsefulNotes/TheFrancoRegime the Franco dictatorship]], and its onscreen gore, nudity and villainous portrayal of judges, conservatives, landlords, priests and civil guards, the movie was guaranteed to run into trouble. It sat ''specially'' bad with then sitting Minister of Culture Ricardo de la Cierva, a holdover of the dictatorship who, in a case of LifeImitatesArt [[ArtImitatesLife Imitates Life]], ordered the film pulled and its director, Pilar Miró to be tried [[DisproportionateRetribution by a military tribunal]] for slandering the Civil Guard, the only time this happened in post-Francoist Spain. However, the case was thrown before trial when it was ruled that no crime was possible due to all film censorship having been abolished in Spain in 1977.
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12The film hit Spanish theatres at last in 1981. Despite its limited August release and an 'S' rating (equivalent to the American 'R'), it absolutely broke the national box office helped by a great dose of the StreisandEffect. It also established Miró as a film director, as she had almost exclusively worked in television before.
13----
14!!Tropes:
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16* AcquittedTooLate: In a non-lethal example, Gregorio and León are proven innocent after their jail sentence is over.
17* AllForNothing: Grimaldos is found to have been alive in another village the entire time.
18* AlwaysGetsHisMan: HangingJudge [[InspectorJavert Isasa]]. Very PlayedForDrama.
19* AndStarring: Fernando Rey as Deputy Contreras.
20* ArtisticLicenseHistory:
21** The civil guards wear greenish-gray through the whole movie, but they should wear navy blue before the 1920s. The only thing that changes noticeably is that they wear white hats instead of black in some scenes set in the 1910s (as they actually did in some cases).
22** The epilogue implies that Taboada committed suicide along with the judge and the priest before he could be prosecuted. In reality, he was prosecuted, [[MiscarriageOfJustice found innocent]], [[FreakierThanFiction met randomly in Madrid with the accussed after they were exhonerated and got in a fight with them]], and was [[CallItKarma murdered for unrelated reasons]] during the UsefulNotes/SpanishCivilWar.
23* AristocratsAreEvil: Though there are exceptions, it's almost a rule that the sharper dressed a character is in this film, the more morally despicable he is beneath.
24* BadCopIncompetentCop: All they had to do was to find ''El Cepa'' or contact their own colleagues who knew ''El Cepa'' and where he was.
25* BasedOnATrueStory: ...yes.
26* BlatantLies: The summary of the first investigation ends with the claim that the accussed were not tortured nor injured during preventive prison in any way, and that there was no reason to think otherwise.
27* TheBrute: Sergeant Taboada is a mindless henchman to Isasa.
28* ClearTheirName: Eventually achieved by [[HeelFaceTurn Isasa's servant]], [[ChekhovsGunman Alejandra]].
29* ChekhovsGunman: Alejandra.
30* ChristianityIsCatholic: At this time in Spain, pretty much the truth, and with a pretty jarring influence over civilian life (just look at the number of crosses in the tribunal).
31* ColdBloodedTorture: [[TorturePorn The Movie.]]
32* ConvictedByPublicOpinion: Long before trial, the accussed become guilty in the eyes of everyone, who won't even consider their innocence and just look for ways to prove their guilt. Gregorio's wife is almost arrested too because of the same wild rumors, but Isasa prevents it because he [[EvenEvilHasStandards doesn't want]] to [[DoubleStandard take her away from her children.]]
33* CutHimselfShaving: Taboada invokes the trope when he shaves Gregorio, telling him to not move, less he cut "himself". [[YankTheDogsChain He then picks some pliers and rips out his moustache]].
34* DirtyCoward:
35** When the guards come to escort ''El Cepa'' back to La Osa, his main concern is if he will be thrown in jail. Once before Gregorio, he throws himself at his feet, claiming to know nothing of his disgrace, before fleeing as soon as the crowd's attention is not on himself. It is at least possible that he knew about the men paying for his "murder" but was too afraid to come forward.
36** Don Rufo, who when confronted with evidence that ''El Cepa'' is still alive cares only about how this will reflect upon himself, hides and denies said evidence, and finally takes the coward's way out by killing himself. The kicker? Don Rufo is the village's [[HolierThanThou Catholic priest]].
37** Taboada ([[ArtisticLicenseHistory in the movie]]) and Isasa also kill themselves rather than face the same justice they claim to serve.
38* EvenEvilHasStandards:
39** Isasa keeps Gregorio's wife out of jail because he doesn't want her children to lose both parents.
40** Taboada pushes Gregorio's wife to the ground the moment after she's arrested, even though he has no reason at all and everyone is watching him. However, he picks her child midair so she doesn't also hit the ground.
41* FedToPigs: When all attempts to locate the body fail, a rumor arises that the accused fed it to pigs (among other things), and they are also forced to confess that.
42* {{Fingore}}: In one graphic scene, León has splinters driven under his nails. One nail pops out of his finger completely.
43* TheFool: ''El Cepa'', the village idiot.
44* GroinAttack: In another scene, León is hung from a beam in the roof by his genitals.
45* HeelFaceTurn: Although she was never evil to begin with (nor showed any sign that she believed them guilty) Alejandra betrays Isasa, ruins his career and eventually drives him to suicide by exposing that ''El Cepa'' is still alive.
46* HeterosexualLifePartners: León and Gregorio, before they are driven to blame each other for their ordeal.
47* HangingJudge: Isasa, although as an ''investigative'' judge, he is closer to an InspectorJavert and doesn't impose the sentence.
48* HolierThanThou: Don Rufo, the priest, betrays any Christian ideal as soon as he is confronted with evidence that he screwed up and might have to pay for it.
49* InspectorJavert: Isasa, since he believes the accussed are guilty without question.
50* InsaneTrollLogic: Every time the accussed get something wrong about the crime, Isasa furiously states that they are lying and mocking the investigators. The idea that they might be innocent, despite the absolute lack of evidence of their guilt, never crosses his mind.
51* KangarooCourt: After five years of the accussed being already ConvictedByPublicOpinion, the Court is as convinced of Gregorio and León's guilt as everyone else.
52* {{Malaproper}}: ''El Cepa'' has the least educated speech of all characters and confuses his words. As in RealLife, his explanation for what happened is that he had a "''barrunto''" (or "''barruntá''", which means nothing) and he left. "''Barrunto''" is an old Spanish word for a suspicion or premonition, but he uses it to mean "impulsive behavior".
53* MiscarriageOfJustice: The most notable in the History of Spain. Guaranteed to be brought as the UrExample, even a century after.
54* MommasBoy: ''El Cepa'', so much that the moment he disappears his mother is certain that he has been murdered. Averted, however, in that he actually leaves and lives for years without ever contacting her.
55* NeverFoundTheBody: The main problem for the prosecution and the aspect that brings even more torture for Gregorio and León, who obviously can't tell what happened. They eventually settle for a wild rumor about having butchered it, fed the pieces to pigs, incinerated the parts they didn't like, and finally, grinded every bit of bone until there was nothing left.
56* NeverLearnedToRead: ''El Cepa''. When first introduced, he holds a flier about his own "murder" upside down.
57* ShamedByAMob: Gregorio and León are humiliated by the villagers when the Civil Guard escorts them to the cemetary to reconstruct the crime.
58* SmallTownRivalry: Tresjuncos is a typical conservative village under the grip of Deputy Contreras; La Osa is the one leftist hub in the area that is outside his control. They are a one-hour walk apart.
59* TechnologyMarchesOn: Used to show the passage of time in-universe. As [[TheRoaringTwenties the Twenties]] roar along, Tresjuncos gets a paved road and a telephone line.
60* ThrowTheDogABone: After Taboada leaves the room, the guard supposed to carry on with Gregorio's torture is so sickened by it all that he tells Gregorio to scream while he belts the wall. He still begs Gregorio to confess and does not give him water in spite of his dehydration, however.
61* TorturePorn: The movie is often accussed of this, despite obviously wanting the audience to feel horrified by it.
62* TragicBromance: In an unusual example, the tragedy is the death of the bromance itself, rather than either Gregorio or León. They reconcile when they get confirmation that both are innocent.
63* UglyGuyHotWife: ''El Cepa'' and his unnamed fiancée. Thank God the children took after their mother.
64* UnconventionalCourtroomTactics: Gregorio's lawyer tries to defend his innocence by reminding the tribunal that they NeverFoundTheBody and that Grimaldos had talked of migrating to Brazil. After León's lawyer convinces him that it is best to claim guilt with diminished responsibility, they claim that their clients were drunk when the murder happened and that Grimaldos provoked them by throwing a chair at them when he lost a card game. The jury is not impressed and denies any mitigating circumstance.
65* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom:
66** ''El Cepa'', by leaving one day suddenly and never contacting his family again.
67** Gregorio and León's boss revives the case when he says that he believes they are guilty in his deathbed.
68** Goaded and threatened by Isasa, Gregorio's wife says that she heard her husband and León talk about the local graveyard once. Despite the absolute lack of evidence, this is taken as further confirmation that they committed the crime and hid the body there.
69* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Isasa, the all-respectable judge. Gregorio's wife even thanks him in one scene, even though he is the one ruining her and her family single-handedly.
70* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: ''El Cepa'''s mother died offscreen, but what happened to his father?
71* YankTheDogsChain: Taboada seems almost charming when he is shaving Gregorio before the reconstruction of the crime. Of course, he's just fucking with him to get his guard down when he tortures him again.

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