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Talk to Her
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Directed by Pedro Almodóvar.
Pedro Almodóvar follows his international success All About My Mother with an offbeat drama that explores the friendship of two men brought together under unusual but strangely similar circumstances. Benigno (Javier Camara) is a male nurse whose apartment overlooks a dance studio run by Katerina (Geraldine Chaplin); he often sits on his balcony and watches one of Katerina's students, Alicia (Leonor Watling), and he finds himself becoming infatuated with her. When Alicia is severely injured in an auto accident that leaves her in a coma, Benigno discovers she has been admitted to the hospital where he works, and he spends his days caring for a woman he now deeply loves but has barely met. Marco (Dario Grandinetti) is a journalist who was assigned to interview Lydia (Rosario Flores), a well-known female bullfighter whose on-the rocks romance with another toreador, "El Nino de Valencia" (Adolfo Fernandez), has made her the focus of the tabloid press. During Marco's interview with Lydia, he goes out of his way to treat her kindly, and she appears to return his attention. During the bull fight which follows, Lydia is gored by the bull, and is now in a coma; Marco is certain his interview broke her steely concentration, and he spends most of his days at the hospital, convinced her injuries are his fault. Alicia and Lydia are both housed in the same ward of the same hospital, and in time Benigno and Marco become close friends, bonding in their shared devotion to women who cannot return their affection. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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lukasblulukasblu Re: Which Almodovar film(s) hav ...
by lukasblu in All about Almodovar
liked it.
""which one would you recommend to start with? " The first movie i have seen by almodovar and recommend to someone watching his or her first almodovar flick is Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!(1990);This flick got me hooked on watching almodovar flicks;For a less graphic movie by almodovar but just as disturbed, i would recommend another fave flick of mine by almodovar called Talk to Her (2002);It is a sad/twisted love storyAlmodovar directed movies that i have seen are:Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!(1990), All About My Mother (1999), Talk to Her (2002), Bad Education (2004), Volver (2006)lesser known produced movies by almodovar i have seen are:The Devil's Backbone (2001), The Secret Life of Words (2006)(also stars sarah polley), and another fave flick of mine starring one of my fave actress sarah polley is My Life Without Me (2003)(would highly recommend this movie)Would like to see and very curious about flick by almodovar is Dark Habits (1983)I have not seen any of his movies before 198 ... " [More]
charlycharly We should all talk to the ones ...
by charly in charly Blog
loved it.
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"The characters situate themselves between life and death, but love is omnipresent, and even leads to soft and beautiful madness..... Spain's cultural aspect isn't left aside. A moving story.... " [More]
spoutgirlspoutgirl Some quotes I use a lot
by spoutgirl in Best movie quotes
hasn't rated it.
""ooooohhh, it tastes so good when it hits your lips", "it put the lotion in the basket or it gets the hose again", "frankly my dear I don't give a damn", "You want the truth? You can't handle the truth!" Anyone else have a good one? " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
As a filmmaker who has built a career out of creating stellar roles for actresses, director Pedro Almodóvar has taken on some bold challenges for Talk to Her. A bizarre love story of a technically nonexistent relationship, it doesn't allow for easy spiritual redemption. Simple melodramatic terms are avoided when the central female characters are rendered unresponsive but ever-present. One of them, Lydia (Rosario Flores), is even positioned in horrifying bullfighting scenes that capture all the gruesome sadness and reality of the ultramasculine sport. When the would-be leading ladies drop out into comas, the two men are forced to deal with all the messy and troubling aspects of relationships -- or lack thereof. Acting as the film's anchor, the balding and muscular Marco (Dario Grandinetti) cries intermittently throughout the film, a small detail that seems almost revolutionary in this context. With a bravery and steadfast kindness, he forges a friendship with the deeply troubled Benigno (Javier Camara) whose mental illness leads the film into several dark places, including a wildly cinematic fantasy construction of sexual exploration. By contrast, the freshly lit scenes of tenderness with crisp white cotton garments belie the destructiveness Benigno is capable of. However disturbing the situation eventually becomes, these scenes speak volumes about the power of devotion as a motivator. Several side characters provide a background for the themes dealt with in the central narrative -- that of the power of faith to renew and transform. But like many human relationships, the result isn't clearly defined, leaving a confusing mess of conflicting emotions. Also, like the film's many well-staged modern dance sequences, the power lies in the constant interplay of reasoning between logic and belief. Ambiguity is one of the film's best assets, leaving the viewer with plenty of moral space for existential questioning. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
 



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