Burning Body
Burning Body (Spanish: El cuerpo en llamas) is a 2023 Spanish-language crime drama miniseries released on Netflix, comprising eight episodes directed by Jorge Torregrossa.[1] The plot centers on the discovery of the charred remains of Barcelona Urban Guard officer Pedro Rodríguez in a burned-out car in 2017, implicating his partner Rosa Peral and her lover Albert López—both fellow officers—in a love triangle-fueled murder.[2] Inspired by the real-life "Crimen de la Guardia Urbana" case, which garnered significant media attention in Spain, the series depicts the investigation, trial, and interpersonal dynamics among the perpetrators, culminating in their 2020 convictions for premeditated homicide; Peral received a 25-year sentence while López got 20 years.[3] Starring Úrsula Corberó as Peral, Quim Gutiérrez as López, and José Manuel Poga as Rodríguez, the production fictionalizes elements of the true events for dramatic effect, including timelines and motivations, while drawing from forensic evidence such as DNA traces and digital records that linked the pair to the crime scene.[4] Notable for its portrayal of institutional distrust within law enforcement, Burning Body received mixed reviews, with praise for the actors' performances amid criticism over pacing and deviations from factual accuracy; the real Peral publicly denounced the series as distorting her narrative of innocence.[5][6] The case highlighted evidentiary challenges in proving intent, relying on circumstantial proofs like search histories for body disposal methods and inconsistent alibis, underscoring causal links between relational betrayal and lethal violence.[3]Premise and real-life basis
Factual background
The charred and partially dismembered remains of Pedro Rodríguez Pérez, a 38-year-old officer with Barcelona's Guardia Urbana municipal police force, were discovered on May 2, 2017, in the trunk of his own vehicle at the Foix reservoir in the Alt Penedès region near Barcelona.[3][7] The body had been set ablaze in an apparent attempt to destroy evidence, and identification was confirmed via a metal spinal prosthesis implanted during recent back surgery.[8][7] Rodríguez, who was divorced with children from a prior marriage, had been in a relationship with fellow Guardia Urbana officer Rosa Peral since 2015; the couple shared a daughter born in 2016 and were engaged in a custody dispute over Peral's children from previous relationships at the time of his death.[3] Peral, aged 35, was conducting an extramarital affair with Albert López, a 37-year-old former patrol partner and also a municipal police officer, which Rodríguez had recently discovered, leading to tensions in their household.[8][3] Police investigations, initiated after Rodríguez was reported missing on May 1, 2017, utilized mobile phone geolocation data showing Peral and López together in Cubelles and other sites linked to the crime scene on the night of May 1–2, along with records of 28 minutes of calls between them that evening.[7][3] Additional evidence included a newly purchased burner phone by López shortly before the murder, post-crime communications suggesting coordination to fabricate alibis, and traces of cleaning agents at Peral's residence consistent with body dismemberment.[3] Both suspects were arrested within days; Peral initially accused López of acting alone, while he claimed she orchestrated the killing after drugging Rodríguez.[8][7] The case, dubbed "El Crimen de la Guardia Urbana," proceeded to trial in Barcelona's Audiencia Provincial court starting in late 2019, where forensic pathology indicated death by blunt force trauma to the head, possibly after sedation, with no signs of defensive wounds.[3] A jury convicted both Peral and López of premeditated murder, aggravated by their abuse of trust as fellow officers, in December 2019; Peral received a 25-year sentence, López 20 years, with motives cited as eliminating Rodríguez to resolve the love triangle and potentially access insurance benefits or shared assets.[7][8] Peral has maintained her innocence through appeals, alleging investigative flaws, but the convictions were upheld as of 2023, with both serving terms in Catalan prisons.[7]Plot overview
Burning Body (Spanish: El cuerpo en llamas) centers on the 2017 disappearance and murder of Pedro Rodríguez Sampere, a Barcelona urban police officer, whose charred remains are discovered inside a burned vehicle at the Foix reservoir on May 3, 2017.[2] The six-episode miniseries employs a non-linear narrative, alternating between the ongoing police investigation into the crime and flashbacks detailing the preceding events in the lives of the primary suspects.[9][10] The plot focuses on Rosa Peral, a fellow urban police officer and Pedro's live-in girlfriend, who reports him missing after he fails to return home following an argument on April 30, 2017.[9] Suspicion quickly turns to Rosa and her extramarital lover, Francisco "Kike" Marco, another police officer with whom she had begun a relationship shortly before Pedro's vanishing.[11] The series examines the toxic dynamics of this love triangle, characterized by infidelity, manipulation, financial disputes, and escalating conflicts, as investigators uncover evidence of Pedro's incineration and dismemberment.[3][12] Through interrogation footage, witness testimonies, and reconstructed timelines, the narrative reveals Rosa's dual roles as a devoted mother entangled in a custody battle and a participant in overlapping romantic entanglements that strain her relationships with both men.[13] Kike, portrayed as increasingly paranoid and entangled in the cover-up, becomes a key figure under scrutiny, while the investigation exposes potential motives rooted in jealousy, revenge, and the desire to eliminate obstacles to Rosa's new affair.[10] The story builds tension around forensic findings, such as traces of accelerant and human remains, pointing to a meticulously planned crime amid the suspects' alibis and conflicting accounts.[9]Key deviations from reality
The Netflix series Burning Body (original title El cuerpo en llamas) incorporates several fictionalized elements diverging from the real 2017 murder of Barcelona Urban Guard officer Pedro Rodríguez by his partner Rosa Peral and her lover Francisco Javier Romero Ródenas, both also Urban Guard members. While the core premise—a love triangle culminating in Rodríguez's strangulation on May 1, 2017, at Peral's home, followed by incineration of his body in a vehicle at Garraf Natural Park—aligns with court records, the narrative extends timelines and alters interpersonal dynamics for dramatic effect, as acknowledged in episode disclaimers.[14][15] One prominent deviation is the portrayal of Peral's family: the series depicts her with a single daughter, Sofia, whereas Peral had two daughters from her prior marriage to Rubén Espinoza. This simplification streamlines the plot but omits real complexities in custody and family interactions during the investigation. Similarly, character names are partially altered; Peral's ex-husband Rubén becomes "Javi" in the show, and his real-life partner Antonia (who later testified against Peral) is renamed Carmen, with the latter's role minimized—no trial testimony is shown, unlike Antonia's real influence in swaying the jury toward conviction.[14][16] Arrest and prison depictions further diverge. In reality, Peral learned of her arrest during a voluntary police meeting on May 12, 2017, rather than dramatically at home in front of her child as dramatized in episode 5; Romero Ródenas was apprehended similarly without the shown domestic confrontation. Prison life is sanitized: the series shows Peral socializing freely with female inmates, omitting her real descriptions of a punitive basement "area" for disciplinary isolation. Additionally, post-conviction events like Peral's 2020 attempt to hire a hitman targeting Espinoza—uncovered via intercepted prison communications—are entirely absent, replaced by fictional tensions in her relationship with Romero Ródenas.[14] Subtle escalations of victim characterization occur, such as an early scene exaggerating Rodríguez's aggression: the show has him physically striking a motorcyclist during a confrontation, stopped by a friend, whereas witness accounts confirm only a shove without blows. The handling of nonconsensual image-sharing allegations against Rodríguez (as "Manu" in the series) is inverted; he denies involvement onscreen, but real evidence included his voice-recorded admission to distributing explicit photos of Peral. Physical and locational details, including altered appearances of Peral's parents and the crime-scene house layout, serve narrative flow over fidelity.[14][16] The investigation timeline is compressed in reality—leading to arrests within 12 days of the body's May 3 discovery—yet stretched across episodes for suspense, introducing speculative interpersonal subplots absent from trial evidence, such as intensified romantic entanglements and forensic reinterpretations. These changes prioritize thriller pacing over the case's documented swift resolution, which relied on digital forensics, witness statements, and partial confessions (Romero Ródenas initially implicated Peral before retracting). Peral and Romero Ródenas received 25- and 20-year sentences, respectively, in February 2020 for premeditated murder, with Peral maintaining innocence by blaming Romero Ródenas alone—a perspective the series explores through fragmented viewpoints but ultimately fictionalizes.[14][15]Cast and characters
Principal cast
Úrsula Corberó portrays Rosa, a police officer whose romantic entanglements lead to the central murder investigation.[2][12] Quim Gutiérrez plays Albert, Rosa's lover who becomes implicated in the disposal of the body.[2][12] José Manuel Poga stars as Pedro, the victim whose charred remains are discovered in a burned car trunk.[2][12] Supporting principal roles include Isak Férriz as Javi, a fellow officer and friend, and Eva Llorach as Ester, involved in the interpersonal dynamics of the case.[12][17]| Actor | Character | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Úrsula Corberó | Rosa | Lead police officer and prime suspect |
| Quim Gutiérrez | Albert | Rosa's extramarital partner |
| José Manuel Poga | Pedro | Murdered police officer |
| Isak Férriz | Javi | Colleague in the police unit |
| Eva Llorach | Ester | Friend entangled in relationships |
Character portrayals and inspirations
Úrsula Corberó portrays Rosa, a Barcelona urban guard officer and single mother whose pursuit of emotional fulfillment leads to affairs with multiple colleagues, including the married Albert, while co-parenting with her partner Pedro. Her character is depicted as resilient yet evasive during the police investigation into Pedro's disappearance, maintaining innocence amid forensic evidence like blood traces and digital records linking her to the crime scene, culminating in a courtroom confrontation where she faces conviction for premeditated murder. This draws directly from the real Rosa Peral, convicted in February 2020 alongside her lover for bludgeoning Pedro Rodríguez to death on May 1, 2017, and burning his body in his vehicle, though Peral has persistently claimed wrongful imprisonment and sued Netflix in 2023 for alleged defamation in the dramatization.[18][3][19] Álvaro Rico plays Pedro Rodríguez, shown as a devoted father of two daughters from a previous relationship and reliable urban guard whose domestic life with Rosa frays under her infidelity, yet he remains trusting until his abrupt vanishing after a routine shift. His portrayal underscores the betrayal by those closest to him, with the discovery of his charred remains on May 3, 2017, in a forest near Barcelona igniting the scandal within the force. The character mirrors the actual Pedro Rodríguez, a 49-year-old officer whose murder exposed internal police dynamics and led to the convictions based on circumstantial evidence including tool marks matching Rosa's garage and witness testimonies of motive tied to life insurance and affair concealment.[14][2][3] Leonardo Sbaraglia embodies Albert López, Rosa's passionate lover and fellow officer, whose initial affair evolves into reluctant complicity in disposing of Pedro's body, marked by internal conflict, alibi fabrication, and eventual confession under interrogation pressure. He is portrayed as torn between desire for Rosa and moral qualms, providing key testimony that implicates her during the trial. Inspired by the real Albert López, sentenced to 20 years as accomplice for aiding in the killing and cover-up, with evidence including his van's GPS data placing him at the disposal site and semen traces linking back to Rosa's activities.[18][20][3] Supporting characters, such as the lead investigator César (José Manuel Poga), are fictionalized to drive the procedural elements, representing institutional scrutiny on the urban guard corps, while drawing from the real case's investigative team that relied on over 100 witnesses and digital forensics to secure verdicts despite no direct eyewitness to the act.[14][2]Production
Development and scripting
The miniseries Burning Body (Spanish: El cuerpo en llamas) was created by screenwriter Laura Sarmiento Pallarés, who served as lead writer and focused on dramatizing the 2017 "Crimen de la Guardia Urbana," the real-life murder of Barcelona police officer Pedro Rodríguez by his girlfriend Rosa Peral and her lover Albert López.[21] The script was co-written by Sarmiento alongside Carlos López and Eduard Sola, emphasizing psychological depth to rationalize an apparently motiveless crime through character backstories and relational dynamics, while relying on court-proven facts from Peral and López's 2020 trial rather than unverified speculations.[22][23] Development originated in March 2022 under producer Arcadia Motion Pictures, with Netflix granting final approval in February 2023, allowing scripting to incorporate extensive research into trial transcripts, witness testimonies, and media coverage of the case, which had captivated Spain due to the perpetrators' roles as public servants.[24] Sarmiento approached the narrative cautiously given its basis in ongoing real-world implications, repeatedly pressing Netflix for alterations to scripts depicting particularly graphic or intimate elements to balance dramatic impact with ethical restraint, as the events' raw intensity risked overwhelming viewers without added context.[25] The writing process prioritized causal motivations—such as Peral's manipulative tendencies and the affair's escalating tensions—over sensationalism, diverging from pure true-crime formats by integrating fictionalized interior monologues and timelines to illuminate interpersonal toxicity absent in official records.[21] This resulted in an eight-episode structure that builds chronologically from the discovery of Rodríguez's burned body in a forest near Barcelona on May 2, 2017, to the investigation's revelations, with Sarmiento citing the challenge of ascribing logic to irrational violence as central to her scripting philosophy.[21]Filming and technical aspects
Principal photography for Burning Body commenced on September 23, 2022, and continued through early 2023, primarily in the province of Barcelona, Spain, to authentically recreate the settings of the real-life events.[26][27] The production, handled by Arcadia Motion Pictures under directors Jorge Torregrossa and Laura Mañá, utilized exterior locations across Barcelona city and its outskirts, including streets, neighborhoods, and landmarks such as La Sagrada Família and the Arc de Triomf for establishing shots.[28][27] Key filming sites encompassed police-related scenes at the Zona Franca industrial area (exteriors of the Mossos d'Esquadra commissary), the Polígono Industrial de Can Magarola in Mollet del Vallès (interiors), and the Port Vell for traffic control sequences.[29] The pivotal discovery of the burned car was shot at the Pantano de Foix reservoir, approximately 50 minutes from Barcelona, capturing road and forested areas to mirror the 2017 crime scene.[29] Additional province locations included Caldes de Montbui for prison exteriors and Manresa's La Rambla for chase and public scenes, with some interiors filmed in Barcelona studios.[29][27] Cinematography emphasized psychological depth over spectacle, employing an anthropological gaze with slow, hypnotic zooms to convey hidden relationships and transcendence.[30] Principal director of photography Ricardo de Gracia (five episodes) shot using the Arri Alexa Mini LF camera, paired mainly with Angénieux EZ-series zoom lenses for their textured rendering in varied conditions, supplemented by Optimo Prime lenses for low-light sequences; Miquel Prohens handled the remaining three episodes.[30] The approach prioritized simplicity to support the narrative's focus on character introspection amid the investigation.[30]Release
Premiere and distribution
Burning Body premiered on Netflix on September 8, 2023, with all eight episodes released simultaneously worldwide.[31][12] The series, originally titled El cuerpo en llamas in Spanish, was produced exclusively for the streaming platform by Arcadia Motion Pictures.[31] As a Netflix original miniseries, Burning Body was distributed globally through Netflix's subscription-based video-on-demand service, accessible in over 190 countries without additional licensing to traditional broadcasters or theaters at launch.[1] The release strategy followed Netflix's standard model for limited series, enabling binge-watching from day one, which contributed to its accumulation of 22.1 million views in the second half of 2023.[32] No physical media or alternative digital distribution channels were announced for the initial rollout.[33]Marketing and availability
Netflix announced the premiere date for Burning Body on July 4, 2023, emphasizing its basis in the 2017 Barcelona police murder case known as "el Crimen de la Guardia Urbana."[31] The campaign featured an official trailer released on August 22, 2023, which highlighted the series' themes of a love triangle, betrayal, and arson, starring Úrsula Corberó—known for Money Heist—as Rosa Peral and Quim Gutiérrez as Francisco Marcos.[34] Promotional materials, including teasers and posters, focused on the true-crime elements and the shocking discovery of the burned body to capitalize on audience interest in real-life scandals.[2] The series launched globally on Netflix on September 8, 2023, as an eight-episode limited series produced by Arcadia Motion Pictures exclusively for the platform.[31][1] It remains available for streaming solely on Netflix in regions where the service operates, with no confirmed releases on other platforms or physical media as of October 2025.[35][1] Netflix's marketing strategy aligned with its approach to international originals, prioritizing digital trailers, social media buzz around the cast, and tie-ins to the real events without additional theatrical or broadcast partnerships.[36]Reception and impact
Critical reviews
Burning Body received mixed reviews from critics, earning a 67% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on nine reviews, indicating a generally favorable but divided reception.[35] Reviewers frequently praised the performances, particularly Úrsula Corberó's portrayal of Rosa Peral, which was credited with carrying the series through its narrative shortcomings and drawing viewers into the psychological complexity of the characters.[13] [37] Critics highlighted the series' strength in adapting a real-life true crime case into a tense thriller, noting its ambiguity and focus on human motivations over explicit moral judgments, which some outlets described as a refreshing departure from typical true crime sensationalism.[38] [39] However, common criticisms included pacing issues, with several reviewers arguing that the seven-episode format felt protracted and diluted tension, leading to unnecessary melodrama and filler.[40] [41] Metacritic did not assign an aggregate score due to insufficient reviews, but individual assessments echoed these sentiments, emphasizing strong acting amid structural flaws.[42] Spanish-language outlets often commended the series for its restraint in avoiding didacticism, portraying protagonists as multifaceted rather than archetypal villains, though some faulted it for prioritizing legal neutrality over deeper ethical exploration.[43] [23] Overall, while not universally acclaimed, the production was seen as a solid entry in Netflix's true crime catalog, bolstered by its basis in verifiable events from 2017-2018 involving Barcelona police officers.[44]Audience response
Burning Body garnered a moderately favorable response from viewers, earning an audience score of 78% on Rotten Tomatoes and a 6.7 out of 10 rating on IMDb based on approximately 7,460 user votes.[35][12] Many praised the series for its suspenseful true-crime narrative, which effectively builds tension through interpersonal betrayals and investigative twists drawn from the real-life murder case.[45] Úrsula Corberó's performance as the central figure Rosa Peral received particular acclaim for its intensity and nuance, helping to sustain viewer investment despite narrative complexities.[45] The production's use of authentic locations and cinematography also drew positive mentions for enhancing immersion in the Barcelona setting.[45] Criticisms centered on pacing issues, with several viewers describing episodes as drawn out or repetitive, potentially diluting the thriller elements.[45] The soundtrack faced backlash for feeling intrusive or ill-suited to the dramatic tone, while those acquainted with the actual events expressed reservations about fictionalized elements altering key details.[45] Overall, the series appealed to fans of Spanish-language crime dramas but divided opinions on its execution of the source material.[46]Controversies and factual disputes
The Netflix series Burning Body (original title: El cuerpo en llamas), which dramatizes the 2017 murder of Barcelona urban guard officer Pedro Rodríguez by his partner Rosa Peral and her lover Albert López, has drawn disputes over its fidelity to the real events. While producers described it as "inspired by" the case known as "el Crimen de la Guardia Urbana," critics and involved parties highlighted alterations, such as depicting Peral with only one daughter despite her having two, and omitting her alleged attempt to hire a hitman against López post-arrest.[14] Peral's arrest was shown occurring at her home, whereas it actually took place at a police station after questioning.[14] Peral, convicted in 2019 alongside López of Rodríguez's murder—sentenced to 25 years for her role in stabbing him, dismembering the body, and burning it in a garage—has contested the series' portrayal as defamatory. She filed a lawsuit against Netflix in 2023 seeking nearly €30 million, alleging violations of her right to honor, privacy, and image through "false" depictions that exacerbated her public vilification.[47][48] A Barcelona court partially ruled in her favor in April 2024 on specific scenes infringing her image rights, though broader claims remain in litigation as of 2025; separate claims on behalf of her daughter were archived after the father's withdrawal.[49][50] Peral's father, Paco Peral, publicly denounced the series in 2024 and 2025 interviews, calling it a "lie" that humiliated his family with fabricated details and ignored investigative context, such as unproven alternative theories he supported.[51][52] Peral attempted to block the September 2023 release via legal channels but failed, later criticizing it alongside Netflix's companion documentary Rosa Peral's Tapes, where she reiterated innocence claims and accused others, prompting rebuttals from Rodríguez's ex-wife and López's defense.[53][54] These disputes underscore tensions between dramatic storytelling—acknowledged by creators as non-literal—and the real case's evidentiary record, including forensic evidence of arson and DNA linking Peral and López to the remains found on May 3, 2017.[2] No formal challenges from Rodríguez's family or prosecutors have been widely reported, focusing instead on the convictions upheld on appeal.[55]Accolades
Awards nominations and wins
Burning Body received three awards and 13 nominations, primarily from Spanish industry accolades recognizing its performances and production.[56] Úrsula Corberó won the 70th Ondas Award for Best Female Performer in Fiction on November 23, 2023, for her role as Rosa Peral.[57][58] She also secured the 74th Fotogramas de Plata for Best Actress in 2023.[59] The series earned five nominations at the 10th Feroz Awards in 2024, including Best Drama Series, Best Lead Actress in a Series (Corberó), Best Lead Actor in a Series (Quim Gutiérrez), and Best Television Screenplay (Laura Sarmiento, Eduard Solá, Carlos López, and José Luis Martín).[59][60] At the 29th José María Forqué Awards in 2023, it was nominated for Best Television Series and Best Actress in a Series (Corberó).[60][59] Quim Gutiérrez received a nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Television Series at the 32nd Union of Actors and Actresses Awards in 2024.[61]| Award | Year | Category | Nominee(s) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ondas Awards | 2023 | Best Female Performer in Fiction | Úrsula Corberó | Won |
| Fotogramas de Plata | 2023 | Best Actress | Úrsula Corberó | Won |
| Feroz Awards | 2024 | Best Drama Series | Burning Body | Nominated |
| Feroz Awards | 2024 | Best Lead Actress in a Series | Úrsula Corberó | Nominated |
| Feroz Awards | 2024 | Best Lead Actor in a Series | Quim Gutiérrez | Nominated |
| José María Forqué Awards | 2023 | Best Television Series | Burning Body | Nominated |
| José María Forqué Awards | 2023 | Best Actress in a Series | Úrsula Corberó | Nominated |
| Union of Actors and Actresses | 2024 | Best Lead Actor in a Television Series | Quim Gutiérrez | Nominated |