All About My Mother
Labels:
*7*,
1999,
90's,
Almodovar,
Best Foreign Film (AA),
Best Foreign Film (BAA),
Drama,
foreign language,
Pedro Almodovar,
Spain
Dir: Pedro Almodovar, 1999, Spain (7*)
Best Foreign Film (AA, BAA)
Almodovar's cinematic homage to women reaches new heights in this Oscar winner, he even dedicates it to: "All women who play actresses, all women, and all those who want to be women", so aside from real women, the cast also includes some gender-benders. The film begins with people watching Bette Davis in "All About Eve", so the connection to 50's dramas about women is made immediately by Almodovar.
It's a fictionalized account of the mother of a teenager who wants to be a screenwriter, a mother who once was an actress apparently, but nothing big. Her life connects with some real stage actresses (doing Tennessee Williams' "Streecar Named Desire"), and the stories of each individual is really what Almodovar's films are all about: the unique, creative people all around who inspire his films, especially women. The Argentinian actress, Cecelia Roth, who plays the mother, was riveting - soapy, yet sincere and believable. The music, I believe by Antonio Inglesias, is very good in all Almodovar's films, and it never intrudes on the scene. One Oscar
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