counter
about us
 
Talk to Her (Hable con Ella) | Geraldine Chaplin, Chus Lampreave | can you really talk to her?
 
 


Suche DVDs:   



 Talk to Her (Hable...  

Talk to Her (Hable con Ella)
Geraldine Chaplin, Chus Lampreave

Sony Pictures, 2003

average customer review:based on 135 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

     highly recommended  highly recommended



From Pedro Almod var the director of the Academy-Award® winning All About My Mother (Best Foreign Language Film 2000) comes his most acclaimed film yet. TALK TO HER is the surprising altogether original and quietly moving story of the spoken and unspoken bonds that unite the lives and loves of two couples. Two men (Benigno and Marco) almost meet while watching a dance performance but their lives are irrevocably entwined by fate. They meet later at a private clinic where Benigno is the caregiver for Alicia a beautiful dance student who lies in a coma. Marco is there to visit his girlfriend Lydia a famous matador also rendered motionless. As the men wage vigil over the women they love the story unfolds in flashback and flashforward as the lives of the four are further entwined and their relationships move toward a surprising conclusion.DVD FeaturesPedro Almodovar and Geraldine Chaplin CommentaryWeblinks to movie website and official Pedro Almodovar websiteDigitally Mastered Audio & Anarmorphic VideoMastered in High DefinitionAudio: Spanish 5.1 (Dolby Digital) French 5.1 (Dolby Digital)Subtitles: English FrenchBonus TrailersInteractive MenusScene SelectionsSystem Requirements:Running Time 114 MinsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: MYSTERY/SUSPENSE Rating: R UPC: 043396089167 Manufacturer No: 08916


 for more information click here


Talk to Her

A slyly subversive ode to love in all its myriad forms, Almodóvar's "Talk to Her" is an intimate, involving tale that examines the dark and even perverse nature of masculinity with great compassion. As always, Almodóvar coaxes exemplary performances from his actors, especially Grandinetti--whose teary Marco is movingly guilt-ridden about Lydia's injuries--and Camara, playing a naive man whose obsessive attachment to Alicia takes a black-comic turn. With its striking visual flair and even a mini silent-film fantasy evoking Buster Keaton, "Talk to Her" is an audacious love fable with an enormous heart.


 for more information click here


can you really talk to her?

This film begins in one place by provoking questions about whether life in a persistent vegetative state is truly life, and whether and how a loved one might relate, if at all, to a person in a coma. Marco is a travel writer whose girlfriend Lydia is in a coma. When he asks the doctor whether there is any hope, the doctor responds, "Medically or scientifically, no, but if you choose to believe, go ahead." The male nurse Benigno does believe. He truly loves the dancer Alicia, who is a patient of his also in a coma. He talks to her, baths her, cuts her hair, and tenderly cares for her. He tells Marcos that the last four years caring for her have been the richest and most rewarding years of his life. The film would have been good enough with just this trajectory, but director Pedro Almodovar drives three of these four subjects toward entirely unexpected and ambiguous ends that leave you with many more answers than questions. In Spanish with English subtitles.


 for more information click here


intense and disturbing......

HABLE CON ELLA (English translation: TALK TO HER) is a look at the lives of two men caring for coma patients, and how their lives intersect and are interconnected by their shared experience. Benigno Martin (Javier Camara) is a nurse who cares for Alicia (Leonor Watley), a beautiful ballerina, who went into a coma after being struck by a car. Marco Zuluaga (Dario Grandinetti) is a writer looking in on his girlfriend, Lydia Gonzalez (Rosario Flores), a bullfighter who was gored and knocked unconscious. Through a series of flashbacks and flashforwards, the pieces of their lives are put together like an intricate puzzle, with an unlikely twist at the end.

This film sent chills up my spine, in some of the sequences (for reasons I won't elaborate on, to ruin the film). This is only the second film I have seen by the Spanish filmmaker, Pedro Almodovar. I find his style as a director and writer to be at once provocative, grotesque and neurotic. The dynamic between the men and women in this story are in a word turbulent. Also, there is a surreal quality to the style of this film that is at once dreamlike and nightmarish. I came away feeling more than a little sick to my stomach......


 for more information click here


unconventional loves

Anything by Almodovor is worth seeing, but he does have a weird idea of love. This drama was unexpected for me: most of the time, the love objects are in a coma, with more than half of the action taken up in the static atmosphere of a hospital: one man, unable to form relationships, loves his charge as a nurse to an absurd point; the other spends his time talking to his comatose girlfriend, but befriends the other man and also begins to love his patient.

While the story has psychological depth and a wonderfully consistent mood, I admit that I did not find it very interesting, when compared to his other films. There is little humor in it, the characters are so strange that I wondered why we should be concerned about them for 2 hours, and the emotions portrayed are extremely rarified to say the least.


 for more information click here


Good, but Depressing

I love the absurdity of Almodovar films like Women on the Verge of the Nervous Breakdown. I enjoyed Volver very much; it had a cohesive plot and excellent performances, but also some of the comedy and absurdity of his previous movies. "Talk to Her" was well done, cohesive and excellently acted. I was particularly taken with the performance, in perfect Spanish, of Geraldine Chaplin. Although I enjoyed the movie and it is worth watching, it was not what I expected from Almodovar because all the characters seem to be damaged and have very sad lives. Consequently, it was depressing to me. I would rather be entertained by his films that contain absurd and humorous characters and situations.


 for more information click here


reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



products you might be interested in




recommendations

my culture (in no particulare order)
The Finest Films of the 21st Century
My Favorite Movies of 2003
Fabulous Foreign Films
Women and Film






hable


HABLE CON ELLA [Non-USA DVD format: PAL, Region 2 -Import- Spain]
Hable Con Ella (Talk to her) [NTSC/REGION 4 DVD. Import-Latin America]
Pedro Almodovar 5-DVD Collection (Bad Education / Talk To Her / All ...
Talk to Her (Hable con Ella)
Hable con Ella (Talk to her) [PAL/REGION 2 DVD. Import-Spain]



talk


Garfield - The Movie
Viva Pedro - The Almodovar Collection (Talk to Her/ Bad Education/ ...
Something to Talk About
Martha Argerich, Evening Talks
Heeere's Johnny - The Definitive DVD Collection from The Tonight Show ...



ella


Pete Kelly's Blues
Dan in Real Life [Blu-ray]
Jazz Icons: Series 1 Box Set (9 DVDs)
The Lion in Winter
Ella Enchanted (Full Screen Edition)



 



search for DVDs
talk to her, con, ella, hable, talk



Google      toavi.com    web
dvd
apparel
baby
beauty
books
camera photo
classical music
computers
dvd
electronics
gourmet food
health personal care
kitchen
office products
outdoor living
computer video games
popular music
software
sporting goods
tools hardware
toys-games
vhs
watches jewelry







randomly chosen


toys & games: Gundam MG RX-78-2 Gundam Ver 1.5 Scale 1/100