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Broken Embraces

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2009 Spanish film
Broken Embraces
Theatrical release poster
SpanishLos abrazos rotos
Directed byPedro Almodóvar
Written byPedro Almodóvar
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRodrigo Prieto
Edited byJosé Salcedo
Music byAlberto Iglesias
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Entertainment España[1]
Release date
  • 18 March 2009 (2009-3-18)
Running time
128 minutes[2]
CountrySpain
Languages
  • Spanish
  • English
Budget$18 million
Box office$37.4 million[1]

Broken Embraces (Spanish:Los abrazos rotos) is a 2009 Spanishromanticdrama film written, produced, and directed byPedro Almodóvar. Led by anensemble cast consisting of many Almodóvar regulars, it starsLluís Homar as ablindMadrilenianscreenwriter who recalls his tragic love for Lena, played byPenélope Cruz, the deceased lead actress in his last directional featureGirls and Suitcases, who was also the mistress of a powerful, obsessive businessman (José Luis Gómez).Blanca Portillo co-stars as his agent Judit, whileTamar Novas portrays her son and Caine's co-writer Diego.

Inspired by darkness and by a photo of a couple that Almodóvar took of El Golfo beach inLanzarote in the late 1990s, the film serves as anhomage to filmmaking, cinema and its variousfilm genres. Stylistically, the film has been described as a hybrid offilm noir andmelodrama.[3] Thematically,Broken Embraces addresses themes likevoyeurism,repression, prostitution, death,vengeance,fixation, illness, and drugs.

Broken Embraces was one of the films competing for thePalme d'Or at the2009 Cannes Film Festival. Dubbed "purest Almodóvar" byThe New Yorker,[4] the film was noted for the director's characteristic "bright primary colors," erotic subject matter, and meticulous, "visually pulsating" cinematography.[5] The picture was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at both the 2009British Academy Film Awards and the67th Golden Globe Awards.[6]

Plot

[edit]

"Harry Caine" is a blind writer who shares his life with his agent Judit and her adult son, Diego. Slowly, events in the present begin to bring back memories of the past. Harry hears that millionaire Ernesto Martel has died; a young filmmaker, Ray X, appears and turns out to be Martel's son, Ernesto Jr. After Diego is hospitalized for an accidental drug overdose in a Madrid nightclub, Harry collects Diego from the hospital and looks after him to avoid worrying his traveling mother. The main storyline is told inflashback as Harry reluctantly tells Diego a tragic tale of fate, jealousy, abuse of power, betrayal, and guilt.

The first flashback is to 1992, which introduces Magdalena "Lena" Rivero, Martel's beautiful young secretary, an aspiring actress. She becomes close to Martel, a millionaire financier, in order to find the money to help meet her dying father's medical bills. By 1994, she has become Martel's mistress. At this time, Harry is still living under his real name, Mateo Blanco, a well-respected film director. Martel is excessively possessive of Lena, but she is determined to become an actress and manages to win the main role in Blanco's filmChicas y maletas (Girls and Suitcases) by bringing Martel in as financier/producer. Martel spies on Lena and Mateo by sending his inhibited, effeminate gay son, Ernesto Jr., to videotape the production of the film, ostensibly for a "making of" feature, then hiring alip-reader to interpret the conversations. Martel, seething with jealousy, screens the videos as the lip-reader narrates the furtive whispers of Lena and Mateo's passionate affair.

Furious, Martel confronts Lena, and when she threatens to leave him, he pushes her down the stairs. But when she survives the fall, he relents and nurses her back to health. Lena makes a bargain with Martel agreeing to stay with him provided he allows Mateo to finish shooting the film and decide the final edit. Reluctantly Mateo accepts this arrangement and finishes the shooting, but as soon as this is completed he escapes with Lena toLanzarote using the name 'Harry Caine' to avoid detection.

Lena takes a job as a hotel receptionist to pass the time. When she and Blanco read inEl País thatChicas y maletas has received terrible reviews from critics, likely the end of Blanco's directing career, they decide to start over again together far from Madrid. Fate intervenes when Blanco is seriously injured and Lena is killed in a car accident, which is immortalized by Ernesto Jr., who has been trailing them with his camcorder. Mateo loses his sight permanently. Judit, his long-time production assistant, and an 8-year-old Diego arrive to help Blanco pick up the pieces and return to Madrid, where he eventually writes screenplays in braille under the pseudonym Harry Caine, represented by his agent, Judit.

The story picks up where it began in 2008: Harry shares his birthday in a bar with Judit and Diego. Judit becomes drunk on gin and, stricken with guilt, confesses to Harry that she sold out to Martel in 1994 because of her fury at Harry for abandoning the film to run away with Lena; she also tells him of her involvement in providing Martel the phone number of the hotel in Lanzarote where Lena and Mateo were hiding. She confirms that Martel sabotaged the release ofChicas y maletas by using the worst take from each scene in order to destroy Mateo's reputation. The next morning, she reveals to Diego that Harry is actually his father, a fact both men were unaware of. Having exorcised some of his demons, Harry decides to return to his life as Mateo Blanco. Though believed lost, the original reels ofChicas y maletas and Ernesto Jr.'s camcorder footage are recovered: Judit had ignored Martel's order to destroy them and instead had hidden them away. Mateo and Diego re-edit the film for its long-delayed release as the director envisioned it.

Cast

[edit]

Reception

[edit]
Pedro Almodóvar with actresses Rossy de Palma and Penélope Cruz presenting the film at the2009 Cannes Film Festival

The film has received generally positive reviews by critics; review aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes reported that 82% of critics gave the film a positive rating, based on 158 reviews. Its consensus states "Pedro Almodóvar's fourth film with Penélope Cruz isn't his finest work, but he brings his signature visual brilliance to this noirish tale, and the cast turns in some first-class performances."[7] It currently holds a score of 76 (generally favorable reviews) onMetacritic.[8]Chicago Sun-Times film criticRoger Ebert gave the film four out of four stars, and wrote that "Broken Embraces is a voluptuary of a film, drunk on primary colors, caressing Penélope Cruz, using the devices of a Hitchcock to distract us with surfaces while the sinister uncoils beneath."[5]The Guardian included the film in its "Top 10 films of 2009" list.[9]

The film was accepted into the main selection at the2009 Cannes Film Festival in competition for the prestigious Palme d'Or,[10] Almodóvar's third to do so, and fourth to screen at the festival.Broken Embraces was nominated for the 2010Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Almodóvar's sixth film to be nominated in this category. It was also nominated for theSatellite Award for Best Foreign Language Film, as well as theSatellite Award for Best Actress for Penélope Cruz's performance.

Accolades

[edit]
List of awards and nominations
AwardCategoryRecipients and nomineesResult
Actors and Actresses Union AwardsLead Performance, FemalePenélope CruzNominated
Lead Performance, MaleLluís HomarNominated
Performance in a Minor Role, FemaleLola DueñasNominated
Supporting Performance, FemaleBlanca PortilloNominated
Supporting Performance, MaleJosé Luis GómezNominated
British Academy Film Awards[11]Best Film Not in the English LanguageAgustín Almodóvar
Pedro Almodóvar
Nominated
Cannes Film Festival[10]Palme d'OrPedro AlmodóvarNominated
Cinema Writers Circle AwardsBest ActressPenélope CruzNominated
Best CinematographyRodrigo PrietoNominated
Best Original ScreenplayPedro AlmodóvarNominated
Best Supporting ActressBlanca PortilloNominated
Best ActressPenélope CruzNominated
Critics' Choice Movie Awards[12]Best Foreign Language FilmWon
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards[13]Best Foreign Language FilmNominated
European Film Awards[14]Best ActressPenélope CruzNominated
Best ComposerAlberto IglesiasWon
Best DirectorPedro AlmodóvarNominated
People's Choice Award for Best FilmPedro AlmodóvarNominated
Golden Globe Awards[15]Best Foreign Language FilmNominated
Goya Awards[16]Best ActressPenélope CruzNominated
Best Costume DesignSonia GrandeNominated
Best Make-Up and HairstylesMassimo Gattabrusi
Ana Lozano
Nominated
Best Original ScoreAlberto IglesiasWon
Best Original ScreenplayPedro AlmodóvarNominated
Irish Film & Television AwardsBest International ActressPenélope CruzNominated
New York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated
Online Film Critics Society AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated
Phoenix Film Critics Society AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmWon
Satellite Awards[17]Best Foreign Language FilmWon
Satellite Award for Best ActressPenélope CruzNominated
Silver CondorBest Foreign FilmPedro AlmodóvarNominated
São Paulo International Film FestivalBest Foreign-Language FilmPedro AlmodóvarWon
Vancouver Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated

Soundtrack

[edit]

The film includes an original soundtrack album composed entirely byAlberto Iglesias, which was released in Spain on CD format to coincide with the film's release. The film also includes two English tracks from American artists: "Robot Oeuf" byUffie, and a cover ofMichael Hurley's "Werewolf" byCat Power.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Broken Embraces (2009)".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved31 July 2020.
  2. ^"Los Abrazos Rotos - Broken Embraces (15)".British Board of Film Classification. 11 May 2009. Retrieved3 July 2013.
  3. ^Smith, Paul Julian (June 2009). "Airless Love".Sight & Sound. Vol. 19, no. 6. p. 19....the central tragic plot ofBroken Embraces, a mix offilm noir and melodrama, spirals off into farcial dead ends..."
  4. ^Lane, Anthony (16 November 2009)."Only Make-Believe".The New Yorker. Retrieved11 February 2011.
  5. ^abEbert, Roger (16 December 2009)."Almodovar and Cruz swept up in a voluptuous cinematic dream".Chicago Sun-Times.Archived from the original on 20 December 2009.
  6. ^"Broken Embraces (2009)". Movies & TV Dept.The New York Times. 2009. Archived fromthe original on 1 November 2009. Retrieved11 February 2011.
  7. ^"Broken Embraces".Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved16 April 2013.
  8. ^"Broken Embraces".Metacritic. Retrieved16 April 2013.
  9. ^"2009 in review: Film".The Guardian. 12 December 2009.
  10. ^ab"Almodóvar competing for the Palme d'Or with Broken".festival-cannes.com. 19 May 2009. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  11. ^"Film Awards Winners".bafta.org. 21 January 2010. Archived fromthe original on 23 March 2010. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  12. ^Kilday, Gregg; Kit, Borys (15 January 2010)."'Hurt Locker' tops Critics' Choice Awards".The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  13. ^"DFW CrixUp in the Air With Year-End Tally".Dallas Observer. 16 December 2009. Archived fromthe original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  14. ^"Archive - European Film Awards 2009".europeanfilmawards.eu. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  15. ^"Broken Embraces".Golden Globes. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  16. ^"24th Goya Awards".premiosgoya.com.Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved3 March 2024.
  17. ^"2009 | Categories".International Press Academy. Retrieved3 March 2024.

External links

[edit]
Films directed byPedro Almodóvar
Awards forBroken Embraces
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