The film was produced by Roland Joffé (also the director), Guy J. Louthan, and Opus Dei members Ignacio G. Sancha and Ignacio Núñez. Sancha and Núñez created a fund that has resources from private equity funds and other institutional and private investors. Spanish media company
Antena 3, owner of the first private television network in
Spain, also funded the film. The production services were provided by Morena Films of Spain and Historias Cinematográficas of
Argentina.
The New York Times, which called the film a
religious epic, reported that a different script written by
Barbara Nicolosi was first offered to
Hugh Hudson and
Alejandro González Iñárritu, who both turned it down. Joffé also initially turned down the offer to work as the film's director. "But he said he reconsidered after he saw a video of Escrivá answering a question from a
Jewish girl who wanted to convert to
Catholicism. Escrivá told her that she should not convert, because it would be disrespectful to her parents. 'I thought this was so open-minded,' Mr. Joffé said."
There Be Dragons features Argentine production director
Eugenio Zanetti, who won the Oscar in 1996 for
Restoration. The costume designer is
Yvonne Blake, who won an Oscar for
Nicholas and Alexandra and designed the costumes for
Superman. Two-time Oscar winner
Michèle Burke is in charge of the special make-up effects.
Stephen Warbeck, who won an Oscar for
Shakespeare in Love, composed the original score. Fr. John Wauck served as an on-set adviser, playing the same role that
Daniel Berrigan played for
Jeremy Irons in
The Mission. Luis Gordon, a former spokesman of the prelature of Opus Dei, stated that "The film team asked us for help in gathering information and we gave them access to the documentation." To portray Madrid in the 1930s, a part of the film was filmed in
Luján, Argentina. The film was heavily re-edited by Ken Blackwell and re-released in the United States in January 2012 with the sub-title "
Secretos de Pasión". The new cut of the film was re-scored by
Robert Folk, and a soundtrack was released on Varèse Sarabande Records. == Story and themes ==