About Us | Submit an Ad/Contact Us | Subscribe | Commercial Printing
Cloudy 19°5 Day Forecast
Home : News : Local News : Movies
Review: 'Broken Embraces' is Almodovar's lastest
By: JAKE COYLE AP Entertainment Writer
11/17/2009
email this storyEmail to a friendpost a commentPost a Commentprinter friendlyPrinter-friendly
In this film publicity image released by Sony Pictures Classics, Penelope Cruz, right, and Carmen Machi are shown in a scene from "Broken Embraces." (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Classics)
In this film publicity image released by Sony Pictures Classics, Penelope Cruz, right, and Carmen Machi are shown in a scene from "Broken Embraces." (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Classics)
In the most indelible scene of "Broken Embraces" ("Los abrazos rotos"), Pedro Almodovar's latest vivid melodrama, Penelope Cruz plays dress-up.


As an aspiring actress named Lena, she's testing wardrobe for a film. She quickly turns to the camera in one wig after another, each time flashing the megawatt smile of a silver screen goddess. It might be Lena's first movie, but Cruz has gotten the hang of this.

In her fourth film with Almodovar, Cruz gives her most glamorous performance yet - and a fitting one, too. "Broken Embraces" is in many ways a movie about movies. It's full of references to other films (including Almodovar's). Cruz is even done up like Audrey Hepburn.

Transformation, like Lena's rapid shape-shifting, is a theme throughout. Almodovar relishes the metamorphoses actors and people undertake while at the same time mournfully observing this constant flight from self.

At the center of the film is Mateo Blanco (Lluis Homar), a writer who takes his nom de plume, Harry Caine, after being blinded in a car accident years earlier. He's a successful screenwriter with a manager, Judit Garcia (Blanca Portillo), whose son Diego (Tamar Novas) also assists him.

"I was always tempted by the thought of being someone else," he narrates.

Mateo's past returns, though, when a young filmmaker aggressively approaches him about a script. Dressed in a black leather jacket and sunglasses, the man introduces himself as Ray X. We soon learn that his identity, too, is a concealment; he was previously an awkward teenager named Ernesto Junior.

Ernesto Junior's visit prompts consternation and a long flashback. (There's a great deal of time shifting and story swapping in "Broken Embraces.")

We travel back to Mateo meeting Lena in 1994, when he could still see. His first sight of Lena - in ravishing close-up - is played like Rita Hayworth's entrance in "Gilda." Mateo immediately falls for her and casts her for his film, a comedy.

Lena is living with an older, wealthy businessman named Ernesto Martel (Jose Louis Gomez), the father of Ernesto Junior. She doesn't love him, but is indebted to him for helping her sick father.

Ernesto, though, is obsessed with Lena. To control her, he finances Mateo's movie and sends Ernesto Junior to document everything Lena does on set. Each night, he watches the footage with a lip reader, soon discovering the budding love between Lena and Mateo.

The trouble that ensues will ultimately lead to the fateful car accident. Along the way are references to Hitchcock's "Notorious," Michael Powell's "Peeping Tom" and Roberto Rossellini's "Voyage to Italy" - at least.

Mateo's telling of the tale, though, returns him to himself. Redemption comes from reassembling the film he and Lena created. Any Almodovar fan will immediately recognize it as a take on his own 1988 breakthrough, "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown."

Sitting at the editing console, Mateo asks whether the film is worth doing, "Or is it crazy?" If this reflects Almodovar's own paranoia, he long ago found a way to get beyond it.

An Almodovar film is unlike anything else: bold, passionate, explosively bright, campy, self-serious, formally constructed. There's not another filmmaker working today (or perhaps ever) who believes so strongly in the extremes of melodrama.

The overcooked drama can grow tiresome, but resistance is typically as futile as trying to fully describe one of Almodovar plots. In his finest films - "Bad Education," ''Talk to Her" - the lushness sucks you in and slyly leads you somewhere darker.

"Broken Embraces" weaves Almodovar's spell just as assuredly as those films (thanks partially to the beautiful camera work of Rodrigo Prieto and the sensuous score by Alberto Iglesias), but the payoff is less. It comes a little too tidily and with a little too much self-reference.

"Broken Embraces," a Sony Pictures Classics release, is rated R for sexual content, language and some drug material. Running time: 127 minutes. Two a nd a half stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:

G - General audiences. All ages admitted.

PG - Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.

R - Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

NC-17 - No one under 17 admitted.


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


©Washington Missouri 2010

Submit your comment now
Comment Title:
Submit your comments on the article in the space below:
Your Name:
Your City & State:  
Your Email Address: (required)
What's This?
In order to verify you are not a spam-bot you will need to use the image above.
The addition of the flashing numbers above =
By submitting your comment, you acknowledge that you have read and accept the Terms and Conditions of this site.

email this storyEmail to a friendpost a commentPost a Commentprinter friendlyPrinter-friendlyTop

Today's Most Read
Death Notices for Monday, Feb. 8 (810)
Deputy Sniffs Out Meth Lab (723)
UPDATE: Man Suffers Burns in Apartment Fire (533)
Charges Filed on Burglary Suspects (461)
Charges Won't Be Filed on Suspected Terrorist Turned In by St. Clair Couple (444)
 
Site Map

Local News
Home
Top Stories
Washington
Union
St. Clair
Pacific
Warren County Record

More News
Sports
Business
Death News, Obituaries
Legal Notices
My Mo Youth
Senior LifeTimes
Franklin County Hall of Honor

Photo Galleries
News
Sports
Artistic
Photos by You

Features, People
Feature Stories
Weddings, Births, Engagements
Missourian In Education

Opinion
Editorials
Letters to the Editor
Online Extras
Email Updates
This Week's Events
Links to Community Web Sites
Local Church Directory
Weather
Fun and Games

Advertising
Classifieds
Yellow Pages
Shop Our Ads
Classified Line Ad Submissions
Garage Sale Ad Submissions

About Us
Who We Are
How to Advertise
Subscription Information
Missourian Vendors
Commercial Printing
Contact Us


For general questions about the website, write to webmaster@emissourian.com
Copyright © 2008 The Missourian Publishing Company. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 1995 - 2010 www.emissourian.com All Rights Reserved.