Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988) - Pedro Almodóvar
Related: Pedro Almodóvar - film - 1988
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988) - Pedro Almodóvar [Amazon.com]
Pedro Almodovar broke into the art-house mainstream with this wild, manic comedy about a gaggle of women and their various problems with men, be they married lovers, cheating husbands, fiancés, or terrorists.
Chock full of the director's over-the-top stylization, in terms of both story and sets, the film is a hilarious yet heartfelt marriage of kitsch and drama, verging on parody but never going entirely over the top.
Nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in 1989. --Mark Englehart, amazon.com
Amazon review
Pedro Almodovar broke into the art-house mainstream with this wild, manic comedy about a gaggle of women and their various problems with men, be they married lovers, cheating husbands, fiancés, or terrorists. Almodovar's long-time leading lady, Carmen Maura, stars as an actress (famed for her laundry detergent commercial as the mother of a sloppy serial killer) who's just been dumped by her married lover. In the midst of trying to track him down for a face-to-face confrontation, she crosses paths with her lover's son (Antonio Banderas), his unbalanced wife (Julieta Serrano), and his new girlfriend (Kiti Manver). Adding more fuel to the fire is the hapless friend (Maria Barranco) who got involved with a Shiite terrorist and is now being hunted by the police. Almodovar, a master of farcical screwball comedy, manages to keep all these balls in the air in dizzy, hilarious style without once losing his momentum. Chock full of the director's over-the-top stylization, in terms of both story and sets, the film is a hilarious yet heartfelt marriage of kitsch and drama, verging on parody but never going entirely over the top. Maura is absolutely breathtaking as the unhinged lover, dispensing wise advice to others while trying to keep a semblance of sanity, and the supporting cast is quintessential Almodovar, including a brief but memorable turn by Banderas in what could have been a bland, go-nowhere role. Nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in 1989. --Mark Englehart, amazon.comJean Cocteau play La Voix Humaine
Willem, Linda M. "Almódovar on the Verge of Cocteau's La Voix humaine" Literature / Film Quarterly 26.2 (1998): 142-47.
[Women is Almodovar's free interpretation of the Jean Cocteau play La Voix Humaine]your Amazon recommendations - Jahsonic - early adopter products