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Published on Sunday, April 14, 2002 - 6:11am |
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The Mississippi Mermaid review Almodovar's TALK TO HER!!!
Harry here, once... not long ago, I received a cel phone call from a person at SONY CLASSICS that said he was going to be screening this for me in Austin soon. (tap tap tap) (twidling my thumbs) AHEM... Here's a wonderful review from the Mississippi Mermaid, and man does it sound like another great film from Almodovar.... Here you go!
« Talk to Her »
a film by Pedro Almodovar
I just saw this movie (in Spanish - a language I don't
speak) with French subtitles (a language I do speak).
I haven't seen any reviews of this up, and don't know
if you're interested or not. But if ever.. here goes.
I'll preface this by saying I'm not all that familiar
with Almodovar's work. I did love « All About my
Mother » and « Women on the Verge of a Nervous
Breakdown ».
« Talk to Her » is sedate (by Almodovar's standards).
The raucous surrealism of some of his past work is
missing here (with the exception of a
«movie-within-the-movie » that foreshadows the main
plot twist which I won't reveal). But he is still
pushing the envelope in a big way. He reminds me of
the comment made in a play by a Tennessee Williams
character: "nothing that is human repulses me, only
unkindness does" or words to that effect.
The story concerns two men who are in love with two
comatose women. Sounds sedate, huh ? It isn't
though. The movie deals with obsessive love, but not
in a (politically correct) negative light. If there
is a man (gay or straight) alive who loves women,
their bodies, their conversation more than Almodovar,
I've never seen his movie. The two men (one a
journalist, the other a nurse in a hospital which
cares for the long-term comatose) meet when the
journalist's toreador girlfriend is gored in the
bullring and remains in a coma. The nurse tells the
broken-hearted journalist not to despair : « talk to
her ».
The two men become friends. The nurse, Benigno, spends
his days and nights tending a lovely young ballerina
Alicia. The girl has been comatose for years
following a traffic accident. But it isn't a
coincidence that Benigno has become her care-giver.
Before her accident, he lived across the street from
the ballet school where the girl trained and where the
lonely Benigno would spend hours watching her dance
through the windows facing his apartment. Benigno is
sexually ambiguous, a self-confessed virgin who spent
most of his childhood and youth caring for an ailing
mother. After his mother's death and Alicia's
accident, he follows his heart to devote himself
entirely to keeping the girl from slipping away, to «
talking to her ». He dresses her up, cuts her hair,
bathes her and talks about everything he has seen,
done, heard, thought, felt. She becomes the
unconscious repository of his hopes and dreams.
Almodovar's sly humor is still in evidence. One
wisecrack about the sexual proclivities of priests
gets a bigger laugh these days than he probably
intended when it was filmed. Alicia's psychiatrist
father (embarrassed by Benigno's physical contact with
his daughter) asks him « what his sexual orientation
is ». The nurse repeats the story to colleagues « he
asked me what my 'sexual orientation was', you know
sort of American for « are you a fag ? »). But
Almodovar is less interested in making the audience
laugh than in making them feel how magical it is to
love someone, how desperate it is to lose them, how
artificial society's taboos can seem when you are
blinded by devotion. His film is about love and the
boundaries it won't respect, about how redemption can
be found in the strangest places. To get there, he
tips his hat at Charlie Chaplin's « Limelight », at «
That Obscure Object of Desire », « The Collector »
even at « Weekend at Bernie's ».
Yet he makes a film that is wholly his own, tending
his actors and his story as lovingly and devotedly as
Benigno does his Alicia.
Yours,
the "Mississippi Mermaid"
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