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IMDbPro

Parle avec elle

Original title: Hable con ella
  • 2002
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
121K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,221
120
Geraldine Chaplin, Pina Bausch, Javier Cámara, Rosario Flores, Darío Grandinetti, Caetano Veloso, and Leonor Watling in Parle avec elle (2002)
Theatrical Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer1:25
9 Videos
99+ Photos
Steamy RomanceDramaMysteryRomance

Two men share an odd friendship while they care for two women who are both in deep comas.Two men share an odd friendship while they care for two women who are both in deep comas.Two men share an odd friendship while they care for two women who are both in deep comas.

  • Director
    • Pedro Almodóvar
  • Writer
    • Pedro Almodóvar
  • Stars
    • Rosario Flores
    • Javier Cámara
    • Darío Grandinetti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    121K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,221
    120
    • Director
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Writer
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Stars
      • Rosario Flores
      • Javier Cámara
      • Darío Grandinetti
    • 289User reviews
    • 88Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 47 wins & 47 nominations total

    Videos9

    Talk to Her
    Trailer 1:25
    Talk to Her
    Talk to Her
    Trailer 1:25
    Talk to Her
    Talk to Her
    Trailer 1:25
    Talk to Her
    Talk To Her Scene: Alicia Drops Her Wallet
    Clip 2:51
    Talk To Her Scene: Alicia Drops Her Wallet
    Talk To Her Scene: Goodluck
    Clip 2:43
    Talk To Her Scene: Goodluck
    Talk To Her Scene: Benigno And Marco Meet
    Clip 1:40
    Talk To Her Scene: Benigno And Marco Meet
    Talk To Her Scene: You Were Fast Asleep
    Clip 2:15
    Talk To Her Scene: You Were Fast Asleep

    Photos121

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    Top cast86

    Edit
    Rosario Flores
    Rosario Flores
    • Lydia González
    Javier Cámara
    Javier Cámara
    • Benigno Martín
    Darío Grandinetti
    Darío Grandinetti
    • Marco Zuluaga
    Leonor Watling
    Leonor Watling
    • Alicia
    Mariola Fuentes
    Mariola Fuentes
    • Rosa
    Geraldine Chaplin
    Geraldine Chaplin
    • Katerina Bilova
    Pina Bausch
    Pina Bausch
    • Bailarina 'Café Müller'
    Malou Airaudo
    • Bailarine 'Café Müller' (Dancer)
    Caetano Veloso
    Caetano Veloso
    • Singer at party - "Cucurrucucú Paloma"
    Roberto Álvarez
    Roberto Álvarez
    • Doctor Vega
    • (as Roberto Alvárez)
    Elena Anaya
    Elena Anaya
    • Ángela
    Lola Dueñas
    Lola Dueñas
    • Matilde
    Adolfo Fernández
    • Niño de Valencia
    Ana Fernández
    Ana Fernández
    • Hermana de Lydia
    Chus Lampreave
    Chus Lampreave
    • Portera
    Loles León
    Loles León
    • Presentadora de TV
    Fele Martínez
    Fele Martínez
    • Alfredo
    Helio Pedregal
    • Padre de Alicia
    • Director
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • Writer
      • Pedro Almodóvar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews289

    7.9120.5K
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    Featured reviews

    george.schmidt

    When a man loves a woman (and she doesn't know it)...

    TALK TO HER (2002) **** Javier Camara, Dario Grandinetti, Leonor Watling, Rosario Flores, Mariola Fuentes, Geraldine Chaplin. Filmmaker Pedro Almodovar once again creates a cinematic masterpiece in his ongoing quest to bring together the war of the sexes as a harmonic convergence this time in a somewhat surreal matter involving a male nurse (Camara) and a tough yet sensitive journalist (Grandinetti) who form a unique friendship when his girlfriend, a bullfighter (Flores), is gored and sent into a coma landing her in the hospital where Camara is taking care of his ‘beloved' (Watling), a dancer, who he has fallen in love with her when he (in a sense) was stalking her. Love, sex, desire and social ills fall into one heady mix of melodrama, soap opera fodder and a sprinkling of comedy as well as a memorable foray into silent cinema with `The Shrinking Lover' (think of an NC-17 version of `The Incredible Shrinking Man') that actually serves as a Greek chorus as to the happenings occurring. Controversial, bold and audacious in its execution yet ultimately haunting, harrowing and altogether human (and humane). One of the year's best films.
    Rave-Reviewer

    Cinema heaven

    Benigno and Marco are both lonely men, Marco because his lover, a woman bullfighter, is in a coma, Benigno, a thirty-year old virgin Momma's boy, from habit. Both are in love, too (Benigno, a male nurse at the clinic, slavishly tends Alicia, a comatose accident victim, for a living). It is he who gives Marco, with whom he strikes up a friendship, the eponymous advice: talk, and your heartfelt monologue will be more meaningful and therapeutic than any marital dialogue.

    Seeing Almodóvar's latest film was one of the most pleasurable cinema experiences I have had for some time. He has over the years amassed the technical skill and maturity to put across quite complex stories in a deceptively simple language. From the shock tactics and punk aesthetics of Pepi, Luci, Bom, y otras chicas del montón (1980), to the Oscar-winning melodrama of All About My Mother (1999), he had already come a long way. Here, finally, was an interweaving of the lives of disparate characters that was not only unabashed in its excess (it always had been), it actually made you care – deeply.

    More bullfighting

    At first sight Hable con ella looks like being another case study in that famously offbeat, not to say queer, book of life according to Pedro. Almodóvar's scenarios have been no strangers to sex, drugs, and heartrending canción (a particular brand of overwrought singing which knows no real Anglo-Saxon equivalent). In Hable con ella we have bullfighting, a theme he used as an excuse for kinky sex in Matador, given a contemporary treatment in the person of 'torera', Lydia (female bullfighters are indeed beginning to compete in a man's profession). Here too we have the apparently off-the-wall and by now notorious scene from the film-within-the-film, El Amante Minguante, in which a shrunken hero takes refuge in his lover's vagina for protection. But neither is gratuitous gesture: Lydia is designed to counterpoint Marco's almost feminine sensitivity, and the latter sequence, far from being there to shock, is a metaphor to spare us a far more harrowing, and morally problematic, plot truth. The ability to turn kitsch into art is increasingly one of Almodóvar's defining features.

    Post-modern?

    While he often refers to other artforms in his films (reality TV in Kika, Ruth Rendell in Live Flesh, canción in High Heels), since All About My Mother the technique has become more assured. Where that film was a paean to female suffering, via All About Eve and A Streetcar Named Desire, in Hable con ella we have two men sharing a tear over a performance by the dancer Pina Bausch. Other references are the Brazilian singer Caetano Veloso, who sings at a party attended by (uncredited) Cecilia Roth and Marisa Paredes (from Mother), and Michael Cunningham, whose novel The Hours similarly has a tripartite structure where each section deepens and sheds light on the others ('tunnels in caves'). In other words the post-modernist borrowing is rendered invisible by being absorbed into the drama: it is not post-modern any more.

    Almodóvar's choice to make a film about the loneliness and longing of men is a courageous one for a very private celebrity, a gamble to follow what might have been the peak of his career, and one which whets our appetite for what is to come.
    7magic_marker

    If this is love, I know love not

    Pedro Almodovar's "Talk to Her" is as suprisingly sweet as it is profoundly disturbing. It is an examination of the nature of love that attempts to challenge our idea of what love is by taking it to its very limits. The lead character is a typical sad sack; slightly disturbed, isolated and sexually inexperienced. He spends his days staring out of his window at a rapturously beautiful dancer, and tries to form a relationship with her by becoming a patient at her father's psychiatric practice. This eventually leads to disaster when he sneaks into her room to steal an item of hers and finds her just coming out of the shower. But the guy perseveres. After spending years looking after his mother (Who wasn't an invalid, she just didn't like moving very much) he gains a degree in nursing and works with camatose patients. To his joy, one of the camatose patients turns out to be the dancer, and so now he can spend all day expressing and demonstrating his love for her. At least, you could see it that way. Or you could see it as an innocent and helpless girl delivered into the hands of a sexual deviant stalker who now can manhandle her and fantacise about her in any way he pleases. I think you can guess by now where the film is heading, and when the ultimate act is committed, Almodovar presents it in such a way as to show the audience how it could be interpreted as an act of love and selflessness. We never see the act itself, only the man's interpretation of it, and the sequence is, suprisingly, quite funny and, in strange way, touching. But that does not alter the fact that Almodovar is attempting to make rape emotionally acceptable. The film makes this particularly clear by its ending, which, if you have been following this review, I am sure you could also guess. Call me a prude, but I have always felt that love that is only felt by one person is not truly love. True love is something that built by two people by constant attention and care. If I tell someone, "I love you" and she cannot say "I love you too," then I am only really in love with an illusion, not a person.
    10MulhollandRob

    Talk to Her-Almodovar goes left field-with tragedy and emotion in brilliant fashion!!

    Rating **** out of ****

    Spanish Writer-Director Pedro Almodovar is a filmmaker that always captures strange, and honest moments within his characters emotions-especially women. Such films as "All About My Mother", and "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown" support this, but in Almodovar's latest film "Talk To Her"--he does something a little different by making men the protagasnits. It's brilliant, unique, and creative filmmaking at its best. However beneath all the brilliance is a lovely, sweet film that is charming in its own little way.

    Almodovar crafts "Talk to Her" with a style that is unique in color and tone, and it has behavioral exposition that is far more mature and tonally sustained than anything he's done before. But the plot is insane as anything that Almodovar's has done before, which makes the movie more of a career-peak change, its a masterpiece constructed on the solid foundation of everything he's previously tried and learned. The movie's great, bad-boy conceit is that its two heroes, wounded-in-love journalist Marco (Dario Grandinetti) and naive nurse Benigno (Javier Camara), are hopelessly in love with women they can't communicate with -- and that really gives the two guys something to talk about, as well as a base for the strongest of friendships. Not that their women are intentionally unreachable; both, you see, are in comas.

    By the end of this crazy, heart-thrilling tale, Almodovar has delivered us through un unexpecting film of humor, human emotions, specific human connections, remorse, and philosophies. "Talk to Her" is more than just a run of a talked about foreign film, and having Oscar-Nomination potential-it is one of the best movies of 2002.
    10radonner

    Perhaps Almodovar's greatest work

    There are many who say that "Todo Sobre Mi Madre" is his best film, but now that I've seen both these movies, I give the nod - by a long way - to "Hable con Ella". This is a masterpiece, and not just because of the poignancy of the characters, or the story in general, or the way the scenes are shot - watching the matador get dressed was quite engrossing - but EVERYTHING comes together so wonderfully. The brilliance of Spanish-language films never fails to amaze me, and this is another one in that long line of greatness. There will be times where the viewer may feel somewhat uncomfortable with the characters and their actions, but that does not stop Almodovar from exploring such emotions; indeed, one sometimes gets the impression that Almodovar's entire purpose is to make you analyze your own feelings - and simply does it better than anyone else. Recommended for anyone who can read subtitles.

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    Related interests

    Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan in Cinquante nuances de Grey (2015)
    Steamy Romance
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Marco asks Lidia her name, he says something like, "It looks you've been predestined to it." That's because bullfighting is also known as "art of lidi."
    • Quotes

      Marco Zuluaga: Love is the saddest thing when it goes away, as a song by Jobim goes.

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits contain the following text: "El 7 de agosto, durante el rodaje de esta película nació Pablo hijo de Cova y de Juan y niño de todos.". This translates to: "On August 7th, while shooting this movie, Pablo, son of Cova and Juan and child of all of us, was born."
    • Connections
      Featured in The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Por toda a minha vida
      Written by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes

      Copyright by Arapua Editora Musical (Brasil)

      Used under permision (SEEM, S.A) Alcalá 70, 28009 Madrid (España)

      Performed by Elis Regina

      Courtesy of Universal Music Spain, S.L.

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Talk to Her?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 10, 2002 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Spain
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures Classics
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Hable con ella
    • Filming locations
      • Puente Romano, Córdoba, Córdoba, Andalucía, Spain(entering city on Roman bridge)
    • Production companies
      • El Deseo
      • Antena 3 Televisión
      • Good Machine
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,357,911
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $104,396
      • Nov 24, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $64,826,117
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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