"All About My Mother": The Total Absence of Men

Rowena 2022-04-19 09:01:57

"All About My Mother": Complete Absence
of

Men Lots of dirty elements. If you think that's what he's doing to attract audiences, you're wrong. The unique skill of this "rogue" director is to use the most thorough lower body to interpret the most solemn and holy theme of benevolence. After watching the movie, you have no erotic feeling at all, you just want to cry, you just want to love all the nondescript people in this world, you just want to stretch out your strong hands and hold the world tightly in your arms, like a baby. You know hurt and hatred are not worth mentioning, love and forgiveness are the real occupiers of this world.

After "I" died, my mother had almost nothing in this world. In desperation, she has only one way to die. But in order to satisfy "my" dying wishes, my mother returned to my hometown Barcelona from Madrid to find "my" father. Everyone knows that it was this journey that led her to the realm of darkness and light, and she won everything with love and forgiveness. The most important thing is that after "I" died, she found the happiness of living in this world again. No matter how chaotic the world is, as long as there is love in the heart, there is hope in life. Love can bring back what was lost.
If the audience is not stupid, I believe the above can be understood. Press not to watch.

Now I just want to talk about the missing men in this film. To talk about this topic, in fact, it is best to first look at the biography of director Almodovar, to see what kind of life experience he has, which created him such a "faulty" who has a huge prejudice against the male world. It is said that he had an unhappy childhood. poverty. not understood. Live like a monster in a children's choir. I don't know what kind of person his father is, but from this film he deliberately dedicated to his mother, it can be seen that his father is less than a fraction of his mother's in his heart.

"All About My Mother" basically doesn't have a complete male. Where are the men? It's not crazy, it's dementia. "I" is normal, but before "I" grows up, it is "being" killed inexplicably. You can actually imagine that if "I" was not killed by the director and let my mother take "I" to Barcelona to find my father, then the storyline would be easier to manipulate and more tear-jerking. But the director hardly hesitated, and clicked off "I", leaving the audience there so stupid that they couldn't react for a long time.

Father Lola is certainly a deranged character. Otherwise, this guy wouldn't come back with two fake tits if he went to Paris. The strangest thing is that he raised his breasts higher than his mother's breasts, but refused to castrate below, that is to say, he still kept the huge aggressive words. He himself hangs out with all kinds of men and women, but he can't tolerate his mother, Manuela, in a bikini or a miniskirt. Could this be understood as a man's insatiable desire? After the father had enjoyed the sensory stimulation that a man had, he also had to enjoy the feeling of being a woman. But about the responsibilities of men and women, he didn't want to take half of it. If trouble arises, he can even swept away the belongings of his friends and relatives and run away.

Sister Rosa's demented father, when seeing a woman he doesn't know well, will ask two key questions: How old are you? How tall are you? I believe that men who have chatted with strange women online must be familiar with these two sentences. These are the two questions that men want to ask each other most at the beginning of a chat. If you know the age of the other party, you will know whether the other party has sexual ability; if you know the height of the other party, you will know whether you are sexually interested in her. This is the basic understanding that men need most about women.
After such an analysis, we found that, before Rosa's demented father completely forgot about the world, the remaining thoughts in his idiot's mind were still related to possession and enjoyment? This is so ironic!

Ayue is a good person. She is humorous, optimistic and enthusiastic. She said she exists to please all beings. Ayue and Lola are both intersex. Fake breasts are placed on the breasts, and the appearance has undergone many cosmetic surgeries, but the male roots below are still retained. The difference between Ayue and Lola is that most of the time Lola presents a male mentality, while most of the time Ayue presents a female mentality. This difference determines the roles of Ayue and Lola in this world. In essence, Ayue is a man, but only when she presents feminine features and femininity, does she act like an "angel". Many operations on the body did not distort her mind, but instead gave her all the advantages of a woman. The director seems to want to tell us that everything will be beautiful only when men are feminine?

"All About My Mother" is undoubtedly a movie with huge prejudice against men, but after watching the movie, we asked ourselves and found that the world is really more of us, not more of us, and less of us. Our "contribution" to the world is almost negligible except for the endless destruction and the construction of a pile of extremely hedonic lust garbage. If one day cloning technology is widely used, women can give birth to children without sperm, can we really exit the stage as a species abandoned by evolution as in the movie?

It is said that Almodovar is famous for directing feminist films. I have to find a few more of his films to see. If he can still impress me or even conquer me with such a paranoid point of view, then after watching it, I might as well ask him Let's get out of this world together, and set an example for all the other men who just want to possess and don't want to pay, but still live in this world with shame and shame? Ha ha.

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Extended Reading

All About My Mother quotes

  • Manuela: Don't I look a bit of a slut in this suit?

    Agrado: All the better. These nuns only help whores and transvestites.

  • Agrado: I feel so old, Manolita, and it isn't my age.

    Manuela: It's because of the beating.

    Agrado: The beating I've taken the last 40 years!