Film Review
Although director Pedro Almodóvar has pretty well disowned this
film, partly because he considers it a commission piece rather than something
he would have chosen to make off his own bat,
Entre tinieblas
(a.k.a.
Dark Habits) represents an important milestone
in his career, marking his transition from an underground filmmaker with
a small but loyal following in his own country to an internationally renowned
director. Made on a low budget, the film lacks the polish and sophistication
of Almodóvar's later films (
Law
of Desire,
Bad Education,
Volver), but it has many of the features
that we now associate with this director - his subversive blend of comedy
and melodrama, his daring use of primary colours and unusual camera angles,
the familiar anti-establishment subtext and, most evidently, his use of an
ensemble female cast made up of some very talented actresses, most notably
his faithful muse Carmen Maura.
Dark Habits is a witty and provocative reflection
of a society that apparently has lost its way, a society in which tawdry
material distractions have superseded religion as the means by which most
people find satisfaction and solace in their increasingly meaningless lives.
Deprived of people to redeem, the nuns depicted in the film find themselves
compelled to live like those around them and they ultimately see nothing
wrong with indulging in the pleasures of the flesh, including drug taking,
partying and secretly lusting after members of the opposite sex.
The film has been described as an attack on the Catholic Church but it would
perhaps be fairer to say that it is a critique of our society in general.
What
Dark Habits show us is the insidious effect
of a collapse in moral values arising from the growth of materialism and
a complete breakdown of the old traditions of family, community and religious
instruction. In such a world, seen here in the microcosm of a crumbling
urban convent, the Church has become pretty well redundant, and its passing
can only accelerate our descent into a moral and spiritual vacuum. Almodóvar's
playful portrayal of nuns behaving badly may shock and offend some but there's
no doubt that the film offers a sobering reflection of where our society
is heading, towards an abyss from which there is seemingly no return.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Pedro Almodóvar film:
La Ley del deseo (1987)
Film Synopsis
When her boyfriend kills himself on an overdose of heroine, nightclub
singer Yolanda takes refuge from the police in a crumbling
convent. Here she is welcomed by the sisters of the Order of
Humble Redeemers, who have fallen on hard times. The dormitories
are empty, the nuns' patron has decided to withdraw her financial
support, and with no one to redeem the nuns have taken to some very
bizarre activities. The mother superior deals in heroine, one
sister has adopted a stray tiger as a pet, another sister writes trashy
women's novels under a pseudonym, another continually punishes herself,
and one sister devotes herself to making ornate costumes for the
convent's statues. Yolanda could not have come at a better time,
as she offers the nuns a chance not just to save her, but also to save
themselves...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.