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Director
Pedro Almodovar
Stars Cecilia Roth, Marisa Paredes, Penelope Cruz,
Antonia San Juan, Candela Pena, Rosa Maria Sarda
Certificate
Running time 97 mins
Made Spain, 1999
HE IS Pedro Almodovar,
Spain's most controversial, celebrated, internationally successful
director and this is not about his mother. Manuela's (Cecilia Roth)
only son is killed in Madrid. She travels to Barcelona to find his
father, who calls himself Lola and dresses as a woman.
She meets up with an old friend, Agrado (Antonia San Juan), at the
place where transvestite prostitutes ply their trade, and is taken
on as personal assistant to the actress, Huma Rojo (Marisa Paredes),
who lives with Nina (Candela Pena), a tempestuous drug addict, who
plays Stella to Huma's Blanche DuBois in a touring production of "A
Streetcar Named Desire". She becomes involved with Sister Rosa (Penelope
Cruz), a beautiful young nun, who is pregnant by Lola and now HIV
positive.
Almodovar heaps drama upon melodrama, as if to alleviate Manuela's
grief. All that's missing is a hermaphrodite monkey. Actually, there
is a monkey, but its sex isn't mentioned, which is surprising since
everyone else's is.
The film is far from dull, not as camp as you might expect, emotionally
at a high pitch, expertly directed and nudgingly naughty. Unless you
have both breasts and male genitalia, it is hard to relate to. Almodovar's
freaks are real people with genuine problems and difficult sex lives.
Manuela's pain is put into perspective by what is happening around
her. She is grateful for that and they are grateful to her.
The Wolf
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