Talk to Her (Hable con ella) review from Sight and Sound Magazine
Pedro Almodóvar is a top Spanish celebrity, but that doesn't stop Hable con ella from being resolutely art house. Paul Julian Smith explores a change of direction
His fourteenth feature Hable con ella (Talk to Her)
has just been released to rave reviews, even from the conservative
critics who still tend to deride the Manchegan maestro. Showing on an
unprecedented 276 screens, Hable con ella
has grossed almost $1 million in its opening weekend. The most
prestigious newspaper El País (which itself features in the film) called
it "a beautiful and disconcerting work" that initiates a new stage in
Almodóvar's career. The dailies are full of the director's
'auto-interview', a self-penned inquisition in which he answers only
questions posed by himself. (This is by now a familiar tradition when he
releases a new film.) The glossies feature photo spreads of his latest
'girls', pale and ethereal Leonor Watling and strong-featured, dark
Rosario Flores. Huge billboards showing the two women's profiles, picked
out in red and blue on a black background, cover the faces of the
capital's tallest buildings.
In interview he claims to have screened Hable con ella
direct to the Spanish audience without first taking it to festivals in
order to avoid the punishing round of publicity tours he has previously
endured. Malicious gossip claims that after the unprecedented success of
All about My Mother (Todo sobre mi madre,
1999, which won both Best Director at Cannes and the foreign-language
Oscar), he is scared that the new feature, three years in the making,
won't live up to this highest of standards. Some critics complain that
we've seen it all before. Don't the harrowing hospital scenes go back to
All about My Mother?
And don't the brief comic turns from old favourites Loles León as a
grotesque chat-show hostess and Chus Lampreave as an eccentric caretaker
evoke the carefree comedies of the 1980s? Given the minor qualms
already voiced in Spain about cruelty to animals and rape in Hable con ella,
Almodóvar is also bracing himself for foreign objections he typically
brands "politically correct". Caught in the spotlight, Almodóvar is just
too prominent, constantly repeating that as Spain's best-known
celebrity he is allowed no private life and is condemned to the solitude
that is the flip side of success.
Solitude
Coincidentally
enough (and we should not take such pseudo-confessions too seriously),
solitude is the main and uncompromising theme of Hable con ella.
Focusing uncharacteristically on male friendship, the film is the
story, complex and subtle, of two unusual relationships. Mild-mannered
Benigno (Cámara) is a male nurse who, after the death of his mother,
cares lovingly in the clinic for Alicia (Watling), who lies comatose
after a car accident. Strong but sensitive journalist Marco
(Grandinetti) is equally solitary. Separated from his wife, he falls in
love with female bull?ghter Lydia (Flores), a woman with a past whose
very name evokes the 'contest' ('lidia') of Spain's national sport.
After a goring from a bull, Lydia too is confined to the clinic. The two
men begin a rich and strange companionship, their friendship founded on
lack of communication. Almodóvar takes his title from Benigno's polite
request to Marco: he should speak to his beloved even though she cannot
hear. The psychology of women, he adds, is always a mystery.
Queer sexualities
Previous Almodóvar narratives stayed on the side of the woman. (Indeed it was in 1988's Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown/Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios
that Carmen Maura, pursuing an ever-fugitive male lover, remarked that
male psychology was more mysterious than motor mechanics.) But Hable con ella,
apparently so straight in its premise of twin heterosexual couples,
does continue Almodóvar's oblique investigation of queer sexualities.
One of the most telling scenes shows Flores being buckled into her
bullfighting garb. The camera lingers longingly on the beautiful fabric
that confines her breasts and thighs. The significance of the moment for
Spanish audiences is heightened by the fact that in the real-life
corrida high-profile women bullfighters have recently challenged the
sport's machismo. What is more, Rosario Flores, a distinguished singer
in her own right, is the daughter of Lola Flores, the most extravagantly
feminine flamenco star of an earlier era. The apparently placid
Benigno, Almodóvar's main man, is also sexually ambiguous. Initially the
character seems set up as a stereotypical queen. Mother-obsessed, he
has trained in make-up and hair styling, all the better to care for his
comatose female friend. Apparently a virgin, he confesses to Alicia's
father, a psychoanalyst, that he prefers male company. And his
initiation of intimacy with the mourning Marco seems curiously
seductive. Later plot twists, however, confirm this is not the case:
Benigno will belie his name.
Appropriately, given the clinical setting, much of Hable con ella
is soft-spoken, even delicate in tone, especially the conversations
between the two lovers of absent women. Marco and Benigno, the odd
couple, bond over a common melancholia. Almodóvar has written that he is
aiming for Rossellini and Antonioni here: intensity of emotion combined
with transparency of style. Perhaps his most daring innovation (and one
he knows will test his audiences' patience) is the shift into what can
only be called a full-blown arthouse style.
The shrinking man
The
cultural reference points displayed in FNAC are significant here.
Almodóvar's favourite movies (or so he claims) include not only the camp
classic All about Eve (1950), slavishly cited in All about My Mother, but also the classic neorealism of Rome, Open City (1945) and the hip Mexican urbanism of Amores perros (2000). His record choices embrace as expected kitsch Cuban songstress La Lupe (who features on the soundtrack to Women on the Verge),
but also the more subtle rhythms of Caetano Veloso. (The Brazilian's
melancholy cooing on the plangent ballad 'Cucurrucucu, paloma' receives a
reverent staging in Hable con ella
as the cast assemble to hear Veloso play at a party, joined momentarily
by an uncredited Cecilia Roth and Marisa Paredes, stars of All about My Mother.)
Most telling, though, is Almodóvar's book choice, a pot-pourri of
international distinction from J. M. Coetzee to Bruce Chatwin via
Spanish classic novelist Clarín. The most relevant reference is to
Michael Cunningham's much garlanded recent novel The Hours, a subtle narrative which (like Almodóvar's) interweaves multiple strands by way of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. (The Hours
is soon to be filmed by Stephen Daldry, starring Nicole Kidman.) Cited
in Spanish press accounts of Almodóvar's film is Woolf's diary entry,
which prefaces Cunningham's novel: "I dig out beautiful caves behind my
characters; I think that gives exactly what I want; humanity, humour,
depth. The idea is that the caves shall connect, and each comes to
daylight at the present moment." In just the same way, Almodóvar's four
central characters gradually acquire depth through their progressive
interconnection, even those suspended in the living death of coma.
In the press book and on the excellent new official website Almodóvar has chosen to present Hable con ella with an abstraction worthy of Woolf: "Hable con ella
is the story of friendship between two men, of solitude, and of the
long convalescence from wounds provoked by passion. It is also a film on
lack of communication between couples... on how monologues before a
silent person can be an efficacious form of dialogue. [It is] on silence
as 'the eloquence of the body', on cinema as the ideal vehicle for
personal relations, and how cinema, once put into words, holds back time
and takes up residence in the lives of the speaker and listener." While
Almodóvar's films have always treated the theme of the 'impossibility
of the couple' (and he himself has carefully veiled his own private life
from press attention), Hable con ella
marks his most extreme and most moving portrayal of the imbalance
between amorous partners: men, whether talkative or mute, confront
frozen and silent female bodies, that speak more than they know. (For
the arduous role in which she spends most of the film as an unconscious
but expressive corpse, Watling was rigorously trained in yoga to give
her the patience to play a patient suspended in time.) Most telling in
Almodóvar's description, perhaps, is the importance lent to cinema,
which for the director as for the main character Benigno is the source
of an intimate pleasure life itself cannot provide. Moreover the
cinematic image must be turned into words. Almodóvar has often spoken of
how, as a child in impoverished La Mancha, he would retell the plots of
glamorous movies to his family.
Women weep better
As its press book claims, Hable con ella
integrates small-scale intimacy with outrageous spectacle in a newly
mature manner. The frank emotion of much of the film, unashamed but
never self-indulgent, comes with this new, male territory. While All about My Mother's women were, according to Almodóvar, all "actresses" playing themselves in life as on stage, Hable con ella's
men are "narrators of themselves" telling their stories direct to those
who can (and cannot) hear them. Explaining his preference for heroines,
Almodóvar once claimed that "women weep better." Now he presents us
with Marco, who is moved to tears from the very first scene. The
public's patience will be sorely tried by this opening sequence. A
curtain rises, gold and pink, on a disturbing piece by that
uncompromising mistress of modern dance Pina Bausch in which two
middle-aged women, hair streaming and eyes closed, blunder about a stage
crammed with chairs and tables. (The same curtain featured at the end
of All about My Mother.)
First-night audiences in Madrid were initially unaware that the film
had started, and it's only when Almodóvar finally cuts to moist reaction
shots of Marco and Benigno that the action proper begins. This
principal narration, itself made up of the four main characters' stories
which flash forwards and backwards in time, will be broken by
'independent units' linked symbolically but not literally to the main
action. These (the silent movie, the musical interludes) serve, in
Almodóvar's words, as a "slap in the face" for the audience who are torn
away from one promising plot line only to be confronted with another.
Typically,
however, Bausch's company returns at the end for a final, more festive
dance piece, to bring down the curtain once more. And for all its
transparency, the film is full of such aesthetic patterning. In a nod to
Amores perros
it is split into three unequal parts signalled by intertitles giving
the names of three mismatched couples: Benigno and Alicia, Marco and
Lydia, Marco and Alicia. Repetition brings Woolf's virtues of humanity,
humour and depth. In spite of the men's many differences, Marco will
learn to tend to his mute lover just as Benigno tends to his. Lydia will
fall victim to the bull, as did Alicia to the traffic accident. Much
later brave Marco will take up the position at the window from which
timid Benigno spied on the dance academy where Alicia attended class.
These
fluid identifications extend outwards from the plot to create visual
echoes. When Marco visits Benigno in prison, the faces of the two
friends are superimposed, reflected in the sterile glass of the separate
cubicles to which each is con?ned. Almodóvar exploits symmetrical
framing too. The two women, when comatose, are placed side by side on a
balcony that overlooks a wood. Their unseeing faces are turned to one
another in what Almodóvar dubs "telepathic communication". Nor does Hable con ella
lack the vivid colour and attention to visual detail for which
Almodóvar is famous. It's not surprising that the bull-fighting scenes
(remarkably ungory) are a stylish treat. Less expectedly, Almodóvar
bathes the clinic in tones of warm mustard and ochre, eschewing the cold
blues and greys stereotypically associated with such a sombre setting.
Indeed more than any recent film of his, Hable con ella
exploits the heat (Spanish 'calor') of colour. Associated with the
passionate Lydia is a heightened vision of Andalucía (actually shot in
the province of Cordoba) with its rich, red earth and porcelain-white
baroque chapels. Cinematographer Javier Aguirresarobe, fresh from his
triumph with Alejandro Amenábar's The Others, devises smoothly flowing camera movements, a world away from the trendily nervous trembling of, say, Amores perros.
So
much hallowed professionalism can be wearing, however, and Almodóvar's
casting of Javier Cámara in the creepy central role of Benigno is more
adventurous. The bald and unprepossessing Cámara (here provided with a
convincing wig) has hitherto been underestimated. Known for
unsympathetic roles in television drama series and buffoonish parts in
big-grossing dumb comedies, he stands revealed here as a moving and
complex player, one who opens up the "beautiful cave" behind an
apparently two-dimensional character. Transcending Benigno's isolation,
he is able to convince us, for a moment at least, of what he says to his
new friend Marco: that his tender attentions to the unconscious Alicia
make for a deeper relationship than the majority of marriages. If
Marco's silence is eloquent (Darío Grandinetti's eyes brim fiercely with
desire and distress), Benigno's prattle is no less moving. His endless
monologue is also inspired by love, however displaced and distorted.
Life, love and solitude
Almodóvar
has said that Spanish cinema is not in a good way. In spite of gaining a
much trumpeted 18 per cent of the domestic market in a nation with
perhaps the most frequent filmgoing habits in Europe (twice the rate of
Italy and Germany), only a couple of recent films stand out. Amenábar's The Others
is likely to be a unique case, playing (as Almodóvar himself remarks)
as a Hollywood film in the US and as a Spanish film in Spain. Medem's Sex and Lucia is another rare local success that combines artistic ambition with commercial clout.
In
this context Almodóvar's continued commitment to European production
and to the Spanish language remains remarkable, particularly since after
winning the Oscar he could have made any project he liked. If Hable con ella is not the masterpiece All about My Mother
was, still it signals the start of a new, ambitious and risky period
for Almodóvar: his next project is an erotic portmanteau movie made with
Antonioni and Wong Kar-wai. In a time of dumbing down, Almodóvar's
unapologetic debts to the high culture of Pina Bausch, Rossellini and
Michael Cunningham are not to be belittled. While some of his audience
may fall by the wayside, the faithful will not be disappointed. Rather,
like Mario moved to tears by Bausch's dance, they will accept that even
in postmodern times art can still touch the emotions and an accomplished
artist has the right to follow his or her vision. Confined by success
to his own universe, Almodóvar may find his monologue too becomes a
dialogue, that he is joined in his meditations on life, love and
solitude by a grateful audience that has grown weary of having its taste
underestimated.
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