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Love In A Coma
 

Films Worth Watching by iofilm.com

Talk To Her
No talking back - the objects of the men's love are unaware of their presence

Talk To Her
by The Wolf
Pedro Almodóvar has been the enfant terrible of Spanish cinema for so long, the epithet has lost its sting. At the rebirth of democracy, after the death of Franco, he broke loose with Pepi, Luci, Bom and the name Almodóvar became synonymous with new sexual freedom, as well as a launching pad for exciting young actors, such as Antonio Banderas.

With the excesses of Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down and the frivolous sophistication of Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown behind him, the writer/director delivers a film of depth and sensitivity, in which silence plays a crucial role in understanding the mystery of communication.

It is the story of a friendship between two men, told in relation to their emotional involvement with women in comas. However bizarre this may sound, Talk To Her avoids Almodóvar’s love of ambiguity in matters of sexual orientation. There are no women-who-are-men-who-are-women here. It’s fairly straight, although deceptively unusual.

Benigno’s (Javier Camara) infatuation with Alicia (Leonor Watling) began before her accident. He watched her at ballet class from the window of an apartment opposite. Almost certainly a virgin, his life until now has been caring for his bedridden mother. After her death, he takes a job as a nurse at a private clinic where Alicia lies in a vegetative state. Marco (Dario Grandinetti) is an Argentinean travel writer, who becomes involved with a bullfighter, Lydia (Rosario Flores), on the rebound from a dysfunctional attachment to a drug addict. After Lydia is gored in the ring, she is taken unconscious to the clinic, where Marco meets Benigno and an unexpected friendship takes root.

Almodóvar, who earned two Oscar nominations this year for his screenplay and his directing, makes no assumptions as to the nature of their feelings. Benigno is feminine and Marco masculine and yet this is not a gay relationship. Through a strange coincidence, they find themselves watching over and tending women who are unaware of their presence. It is, in a sense, a shared loneliness.

The film is absorbing rather than depressing, uplifting rather than sad. The performances of Camara and Grandinetti are perfectly judged. Love is a healer and death a journey. Times: Talk to Her is showing as a double-bill with Sex and Lucia at the Ridge Theatre on Wednesday 19th and Thursday 20th.

Moore success for Bowling?

It will be interesting to see if Michael Moore’s assault on American gun culture Bowling For Columbine continues its run of success. It is the only documentary that many people will recognise in the Best Documentary feature category, but will its subject-matter (and that surprise interview with thenow ailing Charlton Heston) be too much for the conservative academy? All will be revealed at the Oscar ceremony on Sunday 23rd 5.30pm.

Call for underground film

If you have a film or video that you think is worth watching, the Antimatter Festival of Underground Short Film & Video (September 19-27, 2003) in Victoria is looking for "imaginative, volatile, entertaining and critical films and videos". Details at www.antimatter.ws.

Reviews are provided by iofilm: www.iofilm.com.





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