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All About My Mother

 
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All About My Mother

  • Director: Pedro Almodóvar
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Feminist Film, Reunion Films
  • Themes: Mothers and Sons, Women's Friendship, Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Cecilia Roth, Marisa Paredes, Penélope Cruz, Candela Peña, Antonia San Juan, Eloy Azorín, Rosa María Sardà
  • Release Year: 1999
  • Country: ES/FR
  • Run Time: 99 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Pedro Almodóvar directed this story of a woman and her circle of friends who find themselves suffering a variety of emotional crises. Manuela (Cecilia Roth) is a single mother who has raised her son, Esteban (Eloy Azorín), to adulthood on her own and has come to emotionally depend on him. One night, Manuela and Esteban take in a production of A Streetcar Named Desire; after the show, Esteban is struck and killed by a passing motorist as he dashes into the street to get an autograph from Huma Rojo (Marisa Paredes), who played Blanche. Emotionally devastated, Manuela relocates to Barcelona in hopes of finding her ex-husband (and Esteban's father), who is now working as a female impersonator. Manuela becomes reacquainted with old friend La Agrado (Antonia San Juan), a transsexual, and is introduced to Sister Rosa (Penélope Cruz), a good-hearted nun who has to contend with her considerably more cynical mother (Rosa María Sardà). While looking for work, Manuela becomes acquainted with Huma Rojo. Huma, on the other hand, has troubles of her own, most involving her drug-addicted significant other, Nina (Candela Peña). Displaying Almodóvar's trademark visual style and a unusually strong sense of character-driven drama, Todo Sobre Mi Madre/All About My Mother received a highly anticipated theatrical run in Spain before winning the Best Director award at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival; in 2000, Almodóvar would receive the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Putting his distinctive spin on the women's picture, renowned Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar affectionately salutes the female spirit and alternative families in All About My Mother. Combining serious melodrama with Almodóvar's signature flair for splashy color and flamboyant, theatrical characters, Manuela's journey to Barcelona to find her dead son's father and assuage her grief balances humor, pathos, and profound insight into love of all kinds -- especially maternal. The unexpected fortitude and empathy she discovers, with the help of a transsexual, a stage diva, and a pregnant nun, turn All About My Mother into a joyful portrait of feminine complexity (complete with La Agrado's hilariously candid monologue about what it took to make her a "real" woman). Among the outstanding cast of actresses in a film dedicated to actresses, Cecilia Roth glows as Manuela, revealing the depths of pain in her face even as she carves out a new life. Marisa Paredes manages to be both imperious and touchingly vulnerable as theater star Huma. Hailed as Almodóvar's most mature and heartfelt work, All About My Mother earned the Best Director prize at Cannes, numerous critics' awards, and a richly deserved Oscar for Best Foreign Film. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

Toni Canto - Lola; Fernando Guillén - Doctor in "Streetcar Named Desire"; Fernando Fernán Gómez - Rosa's Father; Cayetana Guillen Cuervo - Manuela's boss

Credit

Antxon Gomez - Art Director, Pedro Almodóvar - Director, José Salcedo - Editor, Alberto Iglesias - Composer (Music Score), Affonso Beato - Cinematographer, Agustín Almodóvar - Producer, Miguel Rejas - Singer, Pedro Almodóvar - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

High Heels; La Vie Continue; Men Don't Leave; Je Vous Ferai Aimer la Vie; M. Butterfly; The Flower of My Secret; Live Flesh; The Place Without Limits; The Next Best Thing; Hedwig and The Angry Inch; Gaudi Afternoon; Good Bye Lenin!; Tricky Life; Viva Laldjérie
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All About My Mother

Original poster
Directed by Pedro Almodóvar
Produced by Agustín Almodóvar
Michel Ruben
Written by Pedro Almodóvar
Starring Cecilia Roth
Marisa Paredes
Antonia San Juan
Penélope Cruz
Candela Peña
Music by Alberto Iglesias
Cinematography Affonso Beato
Editing by José Salcedo
Distributed by Sony Pictures Classics Flag of the United States
Warner Sogefilms Flag of Spain
Release date(s) April 16, 1999 Flag of Spain
November 24, 1999 Flag of the United States
Running time 101 minutes
Country Spain
Language Spanish
Gross revenue $67,872,296 (worldwide)

All About My Mother (Spanish: Todo sobre mi madre) is a 1999 Spanish drama film written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar. The screenplay deals with complex issues such as AIDS, transvestitism, faith, and existentialism.

The plot originates in Almodóvar's earlier film The Flower of My Secret which shows student doctors being trained in how to persuade grieving relatives to allow organs to be used for transplant, focusing on the mother of a teenager killed in a road accident.

Contents

Plot

The film centers on Manuela, a Nurse who oversees donor organ transplants in Ramón y Cajal Hospital in Madrid and single mother to Esteban, a teenager who wants to be a writer.

On his seventeenth birthday, her son Esteban is hit by a car and killed while chasing after actress Huma Rojo for her autograph following a performance of A Streetcar Named Desire, in which she portrays Blanche DuBois. Manuela has to agree with her colleagues at work that her son's heart be transplanted to a man in La Coruña. After traveling after her son's heart, Manuela quits her job and journeys to Barcelona, where she hopes to find her son's father Lola, a transvestite she kept secret from her son, just as she never told Lola they had a son.

In Barcelona, Manuela reunites with her old friend Agrado, a warm and witty transsexual prostitute. She also meets and becomes deeply involved with several characters: Rosa, a young nun who works in a shelter for battered prostitutes and is pregnant by Lola; Rosa's bigot mother; Huma Rojo, the actress her son had admired; and the drug-addicted Nina Cruz, Huma's co-star and lover. Her life becomes entwined with theirs as she cares for Rosa during her pregnancy and works for Huma as her personal assistant and even acts in the play as an understudy for Nina during one of her drug abuse crises.

On her way to the hospital Rosa asks the taxi to stop at a park where she spots her father's dog and then her own father, who suffers from Alzheimer's; he does not recognize Rosa and asks for her age and height. Rosa dies of AIDS, which she got from Lola: Lola and Manuela finally reunite at Rosa's funeral. Lola (whose real name is Esteban), who is dying from AIDS, talks about how she always wanted a son, and Manuela tells her about her own Esteban and how he died in a car accident. Manuela then adopts Esteban, Rosa's child, and stays with him at Rosa's parents' house. The father does not understand who Manuela is, and Rosa's mother says it's the new cook, who is living here with her son. Rosa's father then asks Manuela her age and height.

Manuela introduces Esteban (Rosa's son) to Lola and gives her a picture of their own Esteban. Rosa's mother spots them from the street and then confronts Manuela about letting strangers see the baby. Manuela tells her that Lola is Esteban's father; Rosa's mother is appalled and says: "That is the monster that killed my daughter?!".

Manuela flees back to Madrid with Esteban; she cannot take living at Rosa's house any longer, since the grandmother is afraid that she will contract AIDS from the baby. She writes a letter to Huma and Agrado saying that she is leaving and once again is sorry for not saying goodbye, like she did years before. Two years later, Manuela returns with Esteban to an AIDS convention, telling Huma and Agrado, who now run a stage show together, that Esteban had been a miracle by not inheriting the virus. She then says she is returning to stay with Esteban's grandparents. When asking Huma about Nina, she becomes melancholy and leaves. Agrado tells Manuela that Nina went back to her town, got married, and had a baby.

Almodóvar dedicates his film "To all actresses who have played actresses. To all women who act. To men who act and become women. To all the people who want to be mothers. To my mother."

Almodovar recreates the accident scene from John Cassavetes's Opening Night as the epicenter of the dramatic conflict.

Production

The film was shot on location in Madrid, Barcelona, and A Coruña in Galicia.

The soundtrack includes "Gorrión" and "Coral para mi pequeño y lejano pueblo," written by Dino Saluzzi and performed by Saluzzi, Marc Johnson, and José Saluzzi, and "Tajabone," written and performed by Ismaël Lô.

The film premiered in Spain on April 8, 1999 and went into general theatrical release in that country on April 16. It was shown at the Cannes Film Festival, the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, the Auckland Film Festival, the Austin Film Festival, the Thessaloniki International Film Festival, and the New York Film Festival before going into limited release in the US. It eventually grossed $8,272,296 in the US and $59,600,000 in foreign markets for a worldwide box office total of $67,872,296[1].

Cast

Critical reception

Janet Maslin of the New York Times called it Almodóvar's "best film by far," noting he "presents this womanly melodrama with an empathy to recall George Cukor's and an eye-dampening intensity to out-Sirk Douglas Sirk." She added, "It's the crossover moment in the career of a born four-hankie storyteller of ever-increasing stature. Look out, Hollywood, here he comes."[2]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "You don't know where to position yourself while you're watching a film like All About My Mother, and that's part of the appeal: Do you take it seriously, like the characters do, or do you notice the bright colors and flashy art decoration, the cheerful homages to Tennessee Williams and All About Eve, and see it as a parody? . . . Almodovar's earlier films sometimes seemed to be manipulating the characters as an exercise. Here the plot does handstands in its eagerness to use coincidence, surprise and melodrama. But the characters have a weight and reality, as if Almodovar has finally taken pity on them - has seen that although their plights may seem ludicrous, they're real enough to hurt."[3]

Bob Graham of the San Francisco Chronicle said, "No one else makes movies like this Spanish director" and added, "In other hands, these characters might be candidates for confessions - and brawls - on The Jerry Springer Show, but here they are handled with utmost sympathy. None of these goings-on is presented as sordid or seedy. The presentation is as bright, glossy and seductive as a fashion magazine . . . The tone of All About My Mother has the heart-on-the-sleeve emotions of soap opera, but it is completely sincere and by no means camp."[4]

Wesley Morris of the San Francisco Examiner called the film "a romantically labyrinthine tribute that piles layers of inter-textual shout-outs to All About Eve, Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, Federico García Lorca and Alfred Hitchcock, and beautifully assesses the nature of facades . . . Almodovar imbues his Harlequin-novel-meets-Marvel-comic-book melodramas with something more than a wink and a smile, and it's beguiling. His expressionism and his screenwriting have always had fun together, but now there is a kind of faith and spirituality that sexcapades like Law of Desire and Kika only laughed at . . . [I]t contains a host of superlative firsts: a handful of the only truly moving scenes he's filmed, the most gorgeous dialogue he's composed, his most dimensional performances of his most dimensional characters and perhaps his most dynamic photography and elaborate production design."[5]

Jonathan Holland of Variety called the film "emotionally satisfying and brilliantly played" and commented, "The emotional tone is predominantly dark and confrontational . . . But thanks to a sweetly paced and genuinely witty script, pic doesn't become depressing as it focuses on the characters' stoic resilience and good humor."[6]

Selected awards and nominations

Academy Awards

BAFTA Awards

Golden Globe Awards

Goya Awards

  • Best Actress (Roth, won)
  • Best Cinematography (nominated – lost to Goya in Bordeaux)
  • Best Costume Design (nominated – lost to Goya in Bordeaux)
  • Best Director (Almodóvar, won)
  • Best Editing (won)
  • Best Film (won)
  • Best Makeup and Hairstyles (nominated – lost to Goya in Bordeaux)
  • Best Original Score (Iglesias, won)
  • Best Production Design (nominated – lost to Goya in Bordeaux)
  • Best Sound (won)
  • Best Supporting Actress (Peña, nominee – María Galiana, Alone)
  • Best Screenplay - Original (Almodóvar, nominee – lost to Alone, Benito Zambrano)

Stage adaptation

A stage adaptation of the film by playwright Samuel Adamson received its world première at the Old Vic in London's West End on September 4, 2007. This production marked the first English language adaptation of any of Almodóvar's works and had his support and approval[8]. Music by the film's composer, Alberto Iglesias, was incorporated into the stage production, with additional music by Max and Ben Ringham. It starred Diana Rigg, Lesley Manville, Mark Gatiss, Joanne Froggatt, Colin Morgan, and Charlotte Randle. It opened to generally good reviews, with some critics stating it improved upon the film[9][10].

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Life is Beautiful
 Italy
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
1999
Succeeded by
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
 Taiwan
Preceded by
La Niña de tus ojos
Goya Award for Best Picture
2000
Succeeded by
El Bola
Preceded by
Life is Beautiful
European Film Award for Best European Film
1999
Succeeded by
Dancer in the Dark

 
 

 

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