Antonio Banderas and Elena Anaya star in The Skin I Live In |
If you had told me a decade ago that Quentin Tarantino and Kathryn Bigelow would have made two of the best films of recent memory, namely Inglourious Basterds and The Hurt Locker, I wouldn’t have believed you. Their body of work, except for his debut Reservoir Dogs and her second feature Near Dark, never looked to deliver on the promise that they could direct anything that great again. But they did. And if you had suggested that Spanish wunderkind Pedro Almodóvar would become one of the dullest, least interesting directors around, I would have scoffed as well. Yet that’s exactly what happened with him. The Skin I Live In, his latest movie, provides more evidence of a filmmaker who’s become stale in terms of imagination, presentation and content.
It’s not always evident why, in some instances, a director can improve in quantum leaps literally overnight (as Curtis Hanson, for example, did with L.A. Confidential). It's also not clear how they can even do a 360 degree turn in their approach to movie-making (as David Fincher did after the vile, misanthropic likes of Se7en and Fight Club in helming the movies – Zodiac, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and The Social Network – which were humane, thoughtful and multilayered, everything his earlier films were not). In the case of Almodóvar, it’s perhaps easier to hazard a guess as to why his promise has pretty much evaporated.
Director Pedro Almodóvar |
Yet around the time that he and Maura fell out, his films begin to exhibit a dull sameness in their approach and subject matter. His films began to lose their head of steam which put him in the same company as his closest American counterpart, John Waters (Pink Flamingos, Desperate Living), who also became less outrageous when his muse Divine passed away. Waters, like Almodóvar, may have also been somewhat undone by even more outrageous movie-makers like Gaspar Noé (I Stand Alone) and Lars Von Trier (Anti-Christ) who followed down the pike. (Waters at least sublimated his cutting wit into his writing, such as his recent quasi-memoir Role Models, which was published in 2010.)
Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down! (1990), Almodóvar’s first film after Maura’s departure, may have had a sexy and talented Spanish actress, Victoria Abril, in the lead; and Banderas, as well, but its tropes, a sadomasochistic/romantic comedy about a kidnapped woman who develops feelings for her captor, were already starting to feel old hat, despite the movie's explicitness which provoked controversy in the United States (garnering an initial X rating and attacks from feminist groups and eventually leading to the institution of the NC-17 film rating to denote films that went further than R rated movies). Subsequently, except for his lively, atypical Ruth Rendell mystery adaptation Live Flesh (1997), Almodóvar’s recent movies, such as Talk to Her (2002), Bad Education (2004) and Volver (2006) have become progressively more staid, restrained and flat. I even had to look up the description of his eminently forgettable Broken Embraces (2009), which starred Penelope Cruz, to remember what it was about. The Skin I Live In is a continued demonstration of his creative decline.
Antonio Banderas as Robert Ledgard |
Essentially a mad scientist film, albeit without any dramatic juice, The Skin I Live In, features Antonio Banderas, returning to the Almodóvar fold after many years, as Robert Ledgard, a respected scientist who has invented a skin that cannot burn – a pronouncement that is met with some skepticism and concern by his close colleagues that he’s up to no good. Soon enough we see that is in fact the case: he’s keeping a young woman Vera (Elena Anaya) in captivity, locked in a padded room that is under surveillance, a process aided by an older female servant Marilia (Almodóvar veteran Marisa Paredes). Who she is and why she is Robert's prisoner is slowly revealed in some key flashbacks, but the revelation, which I won’t disclose, is distinctly underwhelming – and if you’ve seen any number of Almodóvar’s early films, it's not nearly as shocking as he seems to think it is. (The movie also echoes Georges Franju's psychological French horror film, Eyes Without a Face (1960), a superior movie that contains disquieting and disturbing elements largely missing in The Skin I Live In.)
Carmen Maura (right) in Women on the Verge |
– Shlomo Schwartzberg is a film critic, teacher and arts journalist based in Toronto. He teaches regular courses at Ryerson University's LIFE Institute, where he is currently teaching a course on the work of Steven Spielberg. Also on Monday Oct. 17, he began teaching Genre Movies at the Miles Nadal Jewish Community Centre in Toronto .
Excellent review and great way to start. Skin IS a huge disappointment.
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