Housewives, homicide, homosexuality, transvestites, prostitutes, this time also add lizards and pedophiles.
At the beginning, the heroine held a cleaning tool outside the kendo arena to imitate the movements of the students inside, and the plot of sex with a man in the kendo arena later in the bathroom was very concise and powerful to explain her personality characteristics.
Although it is based on women, there are still many interesting supporting roles.
For example, Almodovar himself played a TV musical actor in it-this guy really likes to appear in his own films. (It made me think of a soldier that PETER JACKSON played in the LOR...) I remember that the other seemed to be a musician in "Law of Desire" dressed in heavy clothes and leather clothes (actually, that was his true performance... Khan) .
The neighbor of the heroine's family, CRISTAL (I'm wondering whether she is a prostitute...orz...just a clothing collector)-a yellow flower who dreams of becoming an actor, lives by hosting all kinds of strange men. There is such an impotent man (perhaps just in response to that sentence, JJ is about to fall out...orz), showing his body in front of women, relying on their compliments to build self-confidence. But when it comes to real swords and guns, he is the only one who is as good as anything. The woman under him is saying something to cater to him, while playing with her nails absent-mindedly, while the heroine is doing it on the side. Boringly holding a curling machine. It makes people laugh.
And that lizard called MONEY. If this movie takes it as the protagonist, it will be a life drama centered on telling the tragic fate of small characters. The protagonist finally died in an accident caused by prejudice and misunderstanding. Throwing corpses on the rainy night, spreading across the streets.
In addition, the cute dentist who likes to do small movements. Although the appearance time is short, the performance is very "impressive". Even the DVD put the dialogue between him and the little boy on the main menu.
At the end, the camera's field of vision is first behind the woman. From this angle, the woman has already moved forward, but in the next shot, the woman is still tightly attached to the glass door. Use the lens to extend the time, so that it creates a longer experience for the audience. That's basically it.
As for she leaned down from the balcony with the idea of ending her life, but saw the youngest son she had given as an adopted child approached here, and she suddenly ignited the hope of living anew. That was Almodo. Wa's consistent story style.
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