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General De Gaulle
Franco sings to a folclórica under her balcony. She throws him a pot of flowers. Next to this scene, General De Gaulle is under the balcony of a pretty girl wearing a liberty cap and saying a big YES to the French general. The Spanish Republic was called "la niña bonita" (the pretty girl). -
Les liaisons dangereuses
The Firth French Republic is an old prostitute who opens the door to Franco, who enters in his thief outfit and a revolver in his hand. Liberty is sleeping in a bed. A member of the French legion is watching her. -
Statue of Liberty. Estatua de la libertad.
Franco is painting the Statue of Liberty. It looks surprised because it is dressed as a Spanish Civil Guard, with the Falange yoke and arrows, carrying a pistol and a sable - symbol of the Moor Guard. -
Letter. Carta
Franco is dressed in his military uniform with a svastika and he is on top a cage. Spain is inside the cage. Franco is holding the cage’s keys in his hand when he receives a letter from the United States addressed to “Francisco Franco, the great friend of the free world." -
Crazy. Locos
Franco is reading the The New York Times in a big chair with the Falangist yoke and arrows. He is very surprised and the caption reproduces his thoughts "Republicans, Democrats, and Elections! ... are they mad?" -
Kruschev
Franco is on a stand with the Falange’s symbols and Kruschev is on another with Communist symbols. Both have portraits of murdered intellectuals that have been crossed out behind them. The cartoon shows these names Lorca, Machado, Hernández, and Jiménez behind Franco and Pasternak, Fadeyev, Mayakoysky y Essenin (Yesenin) behind Kruschev. -
Death. Muerte.
A small Franco is sitting on an enormous death seat with the Falange yoke and arrows. -
Man and books. Hombre y libros.
Books imprison a writer or an academic. -
Fist and book. Puño y libro.
A fist blows a book closed and kills a student in between the pages of the book. -
Hearse. Carroza fúnebre.
The Spanish university is a donkey-drawn hearse with the Falange insignia. It hails Isabel and Fernando and the Empire in a sentence with grammatical errors. It is driven by a priest, a member of the economic elite, a military man, and a member of the Falange with a parrot in his hand, identifying the act of piracy that fascism and the empire represented. Students, though, escape through a backdoor.