Torero in ritiro e avvocatessa s'incontrano, si amano, si uccidono nell'attimo del piacere. Melodramma sulla corrida tutto sopra le righe dove gli esseri umani sostituiscono i tori, con un s... Leggi tuttoTorero in ritiro e avvocatessa s'incontrano, si amano, si uccidono nell'attimo del piacere. Melodramma sulla corrida tutto sopra le righe dove gli esseri umani sostituiscono i tori, con un sottofondo di ironia provocatoria. Amore e morte in una Spagna divisa tra rock e Opus Dei.Torero in ritiro e avvocatessa s'incontrano, si amano, si uccidono nell'attimo del piacere. Melodramma sulla corrida tutto sopra le righe dove gli esseri umani sostituiscono i tori, con un sottofondo di ironia provocatoria. Amore e morte in una Spagna divisa tra rock e Opus Dei.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 6 vittorie e 6 candidature totali
- Diego
- (as Nacho Martinez)
- Vendedora Flores
- (as Bibi Andersen)
- Periodista
- (as Veronica Forque)
- Alumna 3ª
- (as Mercedes Jimenez)
- Alumna 4ª
- (as Francesca Romana)
Recensioni in evidenza
From there we go to alternating clips of Antonio Banderas asking the ex-bullfighter Nacho Martínez about women and he compares getting a woman to bullfighting, while we watch someone do exactly that. We are no, of course, prepared for the necrophilia twist in that encounter.
We find our boy, Antonio, and he is a boy in this film, in a strict Catholic household. I would have to guess that his mother was Opus Dei. He attempts to rape his neighbor and confesses to four murders which we know he did not do. This is just Almodóvar's take on religion and repression. He revisits that subjects again in the film, so it must me a theme for him.
But, then the story shifts to Nacho and Assumpta Serna, with Eva Cobo in a minor role. This is where the story gets interesting with the police trying to solve the four murders and the real murderers trying to lay it on Antonio.
It gets bizarre at the end with Antonio seeing the killers in his mind and leading the police to them. But, they arrive too late as the climax of sex and death occurs simultaneous with an eclipse. How weird is that?
The performances make this decidedly odd film work. Assumpta Serna is great as the lawyer, while Antonio Banderas makes an early appearance as her client. Carmen Maura also has a small role, even though her character is somewhat lacking in development. The characters remain convincing even as the plot spins into the out right bizarre.
Some viewers might complain that the film's explicit sex and violence make it little different from an exploitation film, and indeed it opens with a character masturbating to a slasher movie. Furthermore, its commentary on sex and violence at times seems pretentious. However, the film is far more creative and well made than any exploitation film, and is well worth your time.
The personality of ex-matador and his behaviour underlined by his words - 'to stop to kill means to dye for me', on the other hand a high class woman being 'infected' with death, treating Diego as her God of Death, and these two 'lost worlds' slowly approaching each other into a fatal bitter end, which was filled with the most beautiful tune ever made (Esperame en el cielo mi corazon...) all this creates an unforgettable and distinctive impression after watching this movie.
Pedro Almodovar you gave us a great piece of art, I believe there are some more pictures that you can bring to us in the future.
Thanks Pedro..............
As the implications of the title would suggest, the film's narrative is bolstered by numerous references, both spoken and visual, to the obvious role-play and iconography of the bullfight. It is also a film about violence, and the sexuality of violence; an uncomfortable idea that is reinforced by the film's provocative opening sequence, in which we find the central matador of the title, Diego Montes, masturbating to violent scenes of exploitation cinema. The scene establishes the nature of the matador, both as a character and as a social phenomenon, as well as introducing the link between sex and death that will come to form an important thematic strand to the narrative. As the story progresses, the mechanisms of the drama conspire to throw together two separate characters that come to complement the unspoken desires and murderous lust that they seemingly share with one another, with the eventual courtship and inevitable seduction presented by the director as a surrogate bullfight in its self.
Where the film falls apart slightly is in the presentation of the character played by Antonio Banderas, a hyper-sensitive, implied homosexual who idolises the matador to the extent that he actually attempts to rape his young, fashion-model girlfriend (an act that eventually leads him to confess to a string of serial killings as a result of his mother's enforced, catholic guilt). It is a complex character, impeccably performed by the young Banderas, but his appearance ultimately sends the film off on a tangent that detracts from the central crux of the drama. Though the inclusion of this subplot does allow Almodóvar the chance to make a satirical comment on the nature of everything from fashion, to religion, sexuality, etc, these themes often feel like they've been handpicked from a completely different film, not always complimenting the central story, and too often leading it in directions that in the end feel unfinished or slightly unformed. Many of these loose ends can be glossed over, while some (the last minute implication of "second sight" as suggested by a solar eclipse) really seem to come out of leftfield.
Nevertheless, these are minor criticisms that don't necessarily destroy the ultimate intentions of the film - which really only become clear in the final scene - or the fantastic direction of Almodóvar and the performances of his cast. Although Matador certainly has its flaws (not to mention its detractors), it is, in my opinion, a fine little film and one of Almodóvar's most original and audacious creations. The performances are all incredibly committed, including the central pairing of Assumpta Serna and the late Nacho Martínez, as well the fine support from Banderas, the gorgeous Eva Cobo and Almodóvar regulars Carman Maura and Eusebio Poncela; whilst the central idea behind the script and the bold stokes of the director's intuitive grasp of the various film-making processes further refines and develops a number of themes that have come to be at the forefront of Almodóvar's career for the last twenty-five years.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizPedro Almodóvar: In the scene of the backstage dressing room, as "Francisco Montesinos".
- Citazioni
Francisco Montesinos: I've told you not to shoot up in the dressing rooms!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Playboy: The Story of X (1998)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- 鬥牛士
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Viaducto de Segovia, Madrid, Spagna(Bridge where Maria and Diego talk.)
- Aziende produttrici
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