Quinqui (film genre)

Cine quinqui or cine kinki (meaning "delinquency cinema") is a Spanish exploitation film genre that was most popular at the end of the 1970s and in the 1980s.

Features
The films were centered around underclass delinquents, drugs, and love, and usually starred non-professional actors picked off the street. The most representative directors of the genre are José Antonio de la Loma and Eloy de la Iglesia, even if other directors such as Carlos Saura, Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón and Vicente Aranda also reproduced the quinqui social imaginaries in some of their films.

Quinqui films focused on marginalized working-class adolescents in the outskirts of Spanish cities involved in small-scale robbery and street crime. They showed raw violence, explicit sex, police brutality, and commonly depicted heroin use.

The genre draws inspiration from Italian neorealism and the French New Wave. Several of the stars of quinqui cinema would go on to die prematurely, most due to heroin use but some of AIDS. Some of them include José Luis Manzano (actor) (prostitute at age 16, died from overdose at age 30), José Luis Fernández Eguia (heroin user at age 14, found dead in a wasteland at age 23), Ángel Fernández Franco (died from AIDS, age 31) and José Antonio Valdelomar (died from heroin overdose, around age 44).

Legacy
After the demise of the quinqui trend, some directors have looked back to the quinqui era themes in films such as Makinavaja, el último choriso (1992), Semos peligrosos (uséase Makinavaja 2) (1993), Stories from the Kronen (1995), What You Never Knew (2000), 7 Virgins (2005), My Quick Way Out (2006), El mundo es nuestro (2012), Criando ratas (2016), Outlaws (2021), or Caged Wings (2023).