Watch: Los abrazos rotos 2009 123movies, Full Movie Online – Passion, obsession, wealth, jealousy, family, guilt, and creativity. In Madrid, Harry Caine is a blind screenwriter, assisted by Judit and her son Diego. The past comes rushing in when Harry learns of the death of Ernesto Martel, a wealthy businessman, and Ernesto’s son pays Harry a visit. In a series of flashbacks to the 1990s, we see Harry, who was then Mateo Blanco, a director; he falls in love with Ernesto’s mistress, Lena, and casts her in a film, which Ernesto finances. Ernesto is jealous and obsessive, sending his son to film the making of the movie, to follow Lena and Mateo, and to give him the daily footage. Judit doesn’t like Lena. It’s a collision course..
Plot: Harry Caine, a blind writer, reaches this moment in time when he has to heal his wounds from 14 years back. He was then still known by his real name, Mateo Blanco, and directing his last movie.
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Almodovar’s embrace with cinema
There’s never been any doubt about Pedro Almodovar’s unquestioned, unstoppable love for all things cinema, a fact that pops up frequently in his body of work, most notably the autobiographical Bad Education. Like that intrigue-heavy melodrama, Broken Embraces was shown in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, with many critics and bookmakers speculating about the director finally winning the Palme d’Or after many unsuccessful attempts (the closest he came, apparently, was with the stunning Volver). Of course, the movie received zero awards (with the top prize going to Michael Haneke, another “perennial loser” so to speak) and left many people who saw it indifferent. The reason? Almodovar keeps making the exact same films year after year.The “hero” of Broken Embraces is a Spanish screenwriter (Lluis Homar, who played the older priest in Bad Education) who calls himself Harry Caine (a mixture of fictional character Harry Palmer and the actor playing him, Michael Caine, or possibly a play on how Italians and Spaniards phonetically pronounce the English word “hurricane”). He’s blind, and has gone off on a soul-searching journey to deal with a tragedy that occurred 14 years earlier. As the mystery surrounding his past unravels, flashbacks are used to depict a “happier” time, when he could still see, was known as Mateo Blanco and tried to make his last film, on the set of which he met and fell in love with actress Lena (Penélope Cruz), who unfortunately was involved with another, more powerful man…
It’s easy to see why people choose to dislike the film: they’re right, there’s nothing really original in the screenplay (the “solution” to the mystery is easy to guess), in fact Almodovar seems to be going on autopilot, hitting the melodrama button without bothering to make sure he’s doing it the right way. But that doesn’t mean he never does a good job: visually, Broken Embraces is as enchanting as Volver, and if there’s one thing the director hardly ever gets wrong, it’s casting: Penélope Cruz is beautiful and convincingly vulnerable at the same time, Homar elicits enough sympathy as Mateo/Harry, and the “villain” of the piece (José Luis Gomez) is acceptably solid.
As for the self-referential streak in Almodovar’s production (there’s at least one in-joke in every film), he really hits gold this time, with fake footage of Mateo’s lost film coming off as a clever pastiche of earlier hit Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, which starred his other muse Carmen Maura. That scene alone justifies watching the film at least once. Broken Embraces may not be vintage Almodovar, but he’s worth checking out even when he’s “slacking”.
The Intellectual’s “Indy and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull”
In short, this movie is a declaration of artistic bankruptcy.Almodovar is easily the most important European film maker of the 80s and 90s. No other living director has shaped the style and contents of present-day European cinema more than him. It is therefore not easy to say that his latest effort is not just another disappointment after two lackluster films, but rather a complete and total disaster confirming that he has run out of ideas, out of humour and, worst of all, empathy for the characters he creates.
That is not due to the complexity of the story. All Almodovar films are almost impossible to summarize. This time, in fact, it’s rather easy if you are familiar with his earlier work. “Broken Embraces” is a remake of “Law of Desire”, only this time the director is straight and the jealous jilted lover is a millionaire.
For those of you not familiar with that film, I’m doing a summary. If you don’t want to know too much, please skip this paragraph. A blind man, who used to be a famous movie director, seduces a sexy buxom woman reading a paper to him after a chance street encounter (yes, really, that’s how it starts). Just then he gets a visit by his agent and best friend. He mentions to her that he has learned from the paper that a certain millionaire has died, which takes the story 14 years back. He can still see and is about to direct his next film. He stars the inexperienced mistress of the said millionaire as the lead, as he is instantly smitten with her. The millionaire discovers their affair via silent videos made by his gay son, which he has lip-synched by an interpreter (a few great scenes: Cecilia Roth). After violent quarrels, the mistress escapes with the director to a seaside resort where he learns that the millionaire, who produced the film, had it released in the worst possible edit, destroying the director’s reputation. The couple decides to return, but has an accident in which the director turns blind and the would-be actress dies. Back in the present, he learns that his agent has preserved the film’s negatives and starts to reconstruct it.
As in “Bad Education”, there are various sub plots to beef up this rather thin story, and as in “Bad Education”, the result is more confusing than satisfactory. For instance, the agent’s son, who works as a DJ, has an accidental drug overdose – which is completely unnecessary for the plot, and also interpreted rather badly.
Mostly, however, the actors are not to blame, but the way their characters are written. Blanca Portilla as the agent has so many skeletons in her closet that not even a brilliant performance can save the character from ridicule. Lluis Homar is an old man’s dream of a protagonist, living in an artificial world where an English alias and a few sweet words can seduce any super model. And Penelope Cruz is the embodiment of this old man’s sexual fantasy. Her character is completely lifeless. It remains thoroughly incomprehensible why she would go from one old man, who at least helped her family, to a slightly less old man, who isn’t charming enough to convince as either a romantic hero or a passion fuse.
But all these shortcomings wouldn’t make this film so awful. However, Almodovar does the worst possible thing of a director (or any type of storyteller) running out of ideas: he quotes himself, something he has increasingly done, and to very little benefit. The film-within-the-film, which “Broken Embraces” uses as a plot-driving device, is actually “Women at the verge of a nervous breakdown” (1988), only this time it is called “Chicks and Suitcases”. This rather unimaginative title may give you a hint how this beloved classic is treated here: while the dialog making up the final ten minutes of “Broken Embraces” is a frantic, over-the-top exchange of screwball one-liners in the original film, here it is a stern, colorless, pesky business encounter.
In conclusion, this is the D.O.A. brainchild of an exhausted creator of past marvels, pretty much as awful and disappointing as the last Indiana Jones feature. Maybe not so many people would agree with that, because Almodovar used to be such a genius. I’d rather offer my respect to his accomplishments by humbly asking the reader to watch “All about my mother”, or “Tie me up”, or “High Heels”, or “Matador”, all of which bear witness to Almodovar’s unique and unmatched talent. A few more film like this, and his legacy may very well be destroyed for good.
Original Language es
Runtime 2 hr 7 min (127 min)
Budget 18000000
Revenue 30991660
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama, Romance, Thriller
Director Pedro Almodóvar
Writer Pedro Almodóvar
Actors Penélope Cruz, Lluís Homar, Blanca Portillo
Country Spain
Awards Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award9 wins & 46 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera Arriflex 416, Zeiss Ultra 16 Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Millennium, Panavision G-Series Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Platinum, Panavision Primo Lenses
Laboratory Fotofilm S.A., Madrid, Spain
Film Length 3,480 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format 16 mm (Kodak Vision3 500T 7219), 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 250D 5205, Vision3 500T 5219, Fuji Eterna Vivid 160T 8543)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Panavision (anamorphic) (source format), Spherical (source format), Super 16 (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (partial blow-up) (Kodak Vision Premier 2393)