Jorge Alonso
Jorge Alonso’s got a pretty interesting mix of stuff under his belt, honestly. He popped up in “Camino de la suerte” back in 2023, which, if you blinked, you might’ve missed—because let’s be real, Spanish indie films don’t always get their fair share of spotlight. In that one, he’s tangled up in this whole web of fate and second chances, like life just keeps dealing you weird cards until you finally play the right hand. There’s a bit of comedy, a taste of drama, and a bunch of people sort of stumbling their way toward happiness, or at least something that feels like it.
Roll it back a few years to “Campamento Albanta” (2020), and you get Alonso in a totally different world. Think summer camp, except it’s not marshmallows and kumbaya, it’s more secrets, broken friendships, and a whole lot of “what really happened last summer?” tension. It’s got that classic teen drama energy—awkward crushes, betrayals, and a group of kids who seriously need to work on their communication skills. Somehow, Jorge finds a way to keep you guessing, even when the plot gets a little over the top.
If you dig even deeper, there’s “La pecera de Eva” from 2010, where Alonso steps into the chaos of high school therapy sessions. Imagine a fishbowl full of teenagers, each one with their own baggage, and Eva, the psychologist, just trying to keep it all together. Jorge shines in a supporting role, balancing raw emotion with these flashes of humor that make the heavy stuff feel real—not some after-school special nonsense. He’s the kind of actor who doesn’t steal the show, but you remember him anyway. That’s talent.