The Paradoxes of Aid Work: Passionate Professionals
Book
This book explores what attracts people to aidwork and to what extent the promises of aidwork are...
Mourning Freud
Book
Mourning Freud describes and explores the changes in psychoanalytic theories and practices over the...
The Hindered Hand
Sutton E. Griggs, John Cullen Gruesser and Hanna Wallinger
Book
Between 1899 and 1908, five long works of fiction by the Nashville-based black Baptist minister...
The Oxford Companion to Modern Poetry in English
Book
This impressive volume provides over 1,500 thoroughly revised and updated entries on modern poets...
Alice in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll and Donald J. Gray
Book
This perennially popular Norton Critical Edition again reprints the 1897 editions of Alice's...
Selected Poems
Jelaluddin Rumi, Coleman Barks, John Moyne and Arthur J. Arberry
Book
Previously published as The Essential Rumi, Rumi's Selected Poems is translated by Coleman Barks...
The Iceman Cometh
Book
An ominous play set in a cruel world of dark realism, an acknowledged masterpiece from one of the...
Sisters of Castle Leod
Book
**Finalist in the 2022 American Writing Awards** Millions are fans of Diana Gabaldon’s popular...
Historical Biographical Fiction
The Vow
Book
In a stunning work of feminist historical fiction for readers who loved Dawn Tripp’s Georgia and...
Women in Art Historical Fiction Art History Biographical Fiction
BankofMarquis (1832 KP) rated Pain and Glory (2019) in Movies
Feb 3, 2020
Antonio Banderas, rightfully, has earned his (surpisingly) first Oscar Nomination for portraying a somewhat fictionalized version of the Spanish auteur - a once prolific film Director at the tail end of his career coming to terms with who he is, the physical pain he is currently feeling as his body ages and the reverent feelings and fond memories he has for his mother.
It is a strong, subtle and nuanced performance by Banderas - one that is in stark contrast to the bravura and panache that he has shown previously in such films as ZORRO, ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICO and as the voice of Puss 'N Boots in the SHREK films. Banderas' acting his been getting better with age and while I do not think he'll win the Oscar, I do think that this is not going to be the only Oscar nomination he will receive in his lifetime.
I was happy to see Banderas work in his native Spanish language - the same goes for Penelope Cruz who plays Banderas' character mother in flashbacks. I recently saw Cruz working in Spanish in 2018's EVERYBODY KNOWS and was just as transfixed by her performance in this film - worthy of a nomination. She is very good in English Language films, but she elevates to a different level when she works in Spanish. I would have loved to see a whole film about her character - and not just get a few scenes in flashback form.
Watching these 2 performances was well worth the time of watching this film, and that is good for I did not connect with the themes, struggles and plot set forth by Almodovar.
PAIN AND GLORY is Almodovar's semi-biographical meditation on life - and as such is a little to "navel gazing" for my tastes. When I watch these types of films either I get sucked into the narrative and characters (like I did with Alfonso Cuaron's ROMA last year) or...I do not.
And...unfortunately for PAIN AND GLORY...I did not. It is a good picture with 2 really good performances but one I was kept at a distance from and one that I never really connected with.
Come for the meditation, stay for the performances. And...PLEASE...if you watch this, DO NOT watch the dubbed version. Listen to the performances of Banderas and Cruz in their native Spanish and read the subtitles.
Letter Grade: B
7 stars (out of 10) and you can take that to the Bank(ofMarquis)