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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Still pleased with himself
All About My Mother, written and directed by Pedro
Almodóvar
By David Walsh
21 April 2000
Use
this version to print
By the time this comment appears, Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar
will probably have finished two additional films, explained them
with references to a dozen other works and associated himself
with several more filmmakers of the past. This is what Almodóvar
does. He makes clever films and provides clever explanations,
which somehow always manage to put him in the best possible light
and advance his career. He is a national treasure. While there
are no doubt Francoist dinosaurs who look upon him with distaste,
those more astute in the establishment recognize a gold mine when
they see one. Almodóvar has single-handedly put contemporary
Spanish cinema on the map!
Manuela in All About My Mother sees her son, running
in the rain after an autograph, struck and killed by a car in
Madrid in the first few minutes of the film. She travels to Barcelona
in search of the boy's father, now a transvestite named Lola.
Before she finds the latter Manuela comes across one of her former
pals, a transvestite prostitute named Agrado. And two actresses,
Huma and Nina, starring in a production of Tennessee Williams's
A Streetcar Named Desire (Manuela even fills in one night
as Stella). And a pregnant nun, Sister Rosa, who turns out to
be HIV positive. After losing one son, Manuela ends up with another.
Almodóvar says that he started out to make a film about
non-actors who have nonetheless the capacity to act.
More concretely, it became a film about the ability of women to
play-act, to fake. He writes that from his childhood he
remembers how the women faked, lied, hid, and that way allowed
life to flow and develop, without men finding out or obstructing
it.
The title makes reference to Joseph L. Mankiewicz' All About
Eve (1950), about a young actress who schemes her way to success.
Almodóvar dedicates his film to Gena Rowlands in Opening
Night, Bette Davis in Mankiewicz' film and Romy Schneider
in L'important c'est d'aimer. In his notes he refers to
twenty-one other films in which actresses played actresses.
Manuela's ill-fated son wants to be a writer. He has his mother
read to him from the preface to Truman Capote's Music for Chameleons:
When God hands you a gift, he also hands you a whip; and
the whip is intended solely for self-flagellation.
One afternoon or evening Agrado, now working for the actress
Huma, is forced to announce to the theater audience that the performance
of A Streetcar Named Desire will have to be canceled (Nina,
one of its stars, is strung out on drugs). She offers to tell
her life history instead to those who choose to remain. In her
monologue she details her various surgeries and their respective
costs. She concludes: It cost me a lot to be authentic.
But we must not be cheap in regards to the way we look. Because
a woman is more authentic the more she looks like what she has
dreamed for herself.
So all the ingredients are here: film and literary references
galore, considerations of art, artifice, authenticity and "what
is to be a woman," melodrama, the AIDS crisis. One must say,
in Almodóvar's defense, that he is not stingy. An audience
gets its money's worth.
Why then is it all so forgettable? Viewing All About My
Mother is like eating cotton candy, it dissolves unsatisfyingly
as one consumes it.
Like many contemporary filmmakers, Almodóvar is not
prepared to commit himself body and soul in a way that would make
his drama convincing. We are supposed to take on faith too many
of the critical elements. Young Esteban dies in the first few
moments of the film. In a sense, everything depends on the spectator's
involvement in his death and the sequence of events it sets off.
But he's very little to usa face, a few words, a diary entry.
It's not enough to go on. His mother's pain seems real, but the
tragedy remains at a distance.
This is a recurring problem. The announcement by Sister Rosa
that she's HIV positive makes almost no impression. There's nothing
convincing about this scene or the ones involving her that follow.
And the appearance of Lola toward the end, who's dying from AIDS,
should have something grandiose and tragic about it. Again it
falls flat. Almodóvar introduces these emotionally charged
elements and apparently expects the viewer to summon up the appropriate
feelings. But it's the artist's job to make that possible. I felt
that I was continually being manipulated, being directed to find
this or that moment "moving," another one "tragic"
and so on, without the filmmaker having provided the depth and
complexity that allows one spontaneously to feel something.
The themes and motifs that Almodóvar introduces or touches
upon, in other handsOscar Wilde, R.W. Fassbinder, etc.have
a subversive content. To Wilde the artificial was virtually synonymous
with the critical spirit. Life was a failure from the artistic
point of view, it had to be remade. Fassbinder introduced melodrama
to criticize the ways in which oppressive social relations were
internalized, reinforced in everyday life and made the basis for
further oppression.
Almodóvar gives no impression of being dissatisfied
with the way things are. At no point does one feel that the director
grasp or even have an intuition that the various behaviors and
states of mind in the film are socially manipulated in any fashion
or the product of distorted and destructive circumstances. The
insight that there are all sorts of mothersbiological, self-created,
accidentaland all sorts of women seems a limited
one to me. And how does Agrado's comment, amusing as her performance
may be, that a woman is more authentic the more she looks
like what she has dreamed for herself distinguish itself
from the sort of banality one hears on daytime talk shows?
Because everything here curls around and works back on itself
to create the impression that somehow life can be made bearable
in its existing framework. If only there were tolerance of difference,
if only maturity and rationality were not the exclusive property
of some and excess and ecstasy the property of others, if only
Barcelona could lend more of its color to life, if only.... Meanwhile
the filmmaker leads a pleasant life, with a few complaints, and
goes from success to success.
In the past, we were told by one commentator, that Almodóvar's
postmodern style reflects the spirit of these youths, known
as pasotas, or those who couldn't care less.' Now
he's made a serious film, a mature film? No, now he wants to be
thought to have made a serious film, a mature film. Why
is that difference, a crucial one, so difficult to perceive? There
are numerous filmmakers possessing differing degrees of aesthetic
respectabilityTakeshi Kitano, Olivier Assayas, Wong Kar-wai,
Atom Egoyan, Jim Jarmusch and otherswho have careers primarily
because viewers confuse or can be led to confuse feeling something
with playing at feeling it.
This problem, which looms fairly large at the moment, must
have something to do with the stagnation, the unclarity and, frankly,
the corruption that pervades so much of the international cultural
milieu. Artists are largely at sea, producing work whose primary
purpose all too often seems to be making possible the production
of the next work. Generally missing is a means of determining
the objective purpose and value of creative work, and such a means
must have something to do with the notion, once relatively common,
that genuinely artistic effort registers a protest, in one form
or another, against reality. Everything else is simply bits of
colored light or blobs of paint or splotches of ink.
See Also:
Live Flesh,
directed by Pedro Almodovar, based on the novel by Ruth Rendell:
He is pleased with his work
[7 March 1998]
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