Film Review
By the mid-1980s, with five full-length films under his belt, Pedro Almodóvar
was already a force to be reckoned with, the up-and-coming enfant terrible
of Spanish cinema who had already achieved cult status with his distinctive
and iconoclastic style of filmmaking. So confident was the 36-year-old
Almodóvar that he founded his own film production company, El Deseo,
with his brother in 1986 and immediately began making the more polished and
personal films that would soon garner him an international reputation as
an auteur of the first rank.
Law of Desire (a.k.a.
La ley
del deseo) was the first film Almodóvar made for his new company
and it is arguably his most important, creating a template for much of his
subsequent work, with themes that would become central to his oeuvre - themes
such as passion, desire, identity, family and the problems of women.
With its brazenly authentic portrayal of a homosexual love triangle,
Law
of Desire was also a boldly transgressive film for its time, and it still
feels astonishingly modern compared with contemporary depictions of gay men
and gay relationships. Even as late as the mid-1980s, mainstream cinema
wasn't yet ready to accept homosexuality, and films such as Marek Kanievska's
Another Country (1984), James Ivory's
Maurice
(1987) and Stephen Frears'
Prick
Up Your Ears (1987) were distinctly half-hearted in their well-meaning
by overly coy attempts to normalise this aspect of human identity.
Almodóvar makes few concessions to the predominantly homophobic attitudes
of his time and includes in his film not only a full-on depiction of homosexual
desire but a gay sex scene that was shocking in its explicitness (although
incredibly tame by today's standards).
Law of Desire is also
significant for its startlingly sympathetic portrayal of a transgender character,
played to perfection by one of the director's most committed actresses, Carmen
Maura. The latter had already featured in four of Almodóvar's
films - including his debut piece
Pepi, Luci, Bom (1980) - but would
only work with him one more time, on
Women on the
Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988).
Despite its highly controversial subject matter and somewhat melodramatic
treatment of some drastically serious themes,
Law of Desire proved
to be a major commercial and critical success. The film's immense popularity
provided a massive career boost to one of its lead actors, Antonio Banderas,
who was soon being courted by Hollywood on a path that would lead ineluctably
to international stardom. Banderas was the most loyal of Almodóvar's
lead actors, having had his screen debut in the director's early film
Labyrinth
of Passion (1982). By 2019, the two men had collaborated on eight
films, including some of the director's most important offerings -
Women
on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988),
The Skin I Live In
(2011) and
Pain and Glory (2019). The manic intensity that Banderas
brings to his portrayal of a sexually ambiguous man consumed by his blazing
passions is, more than anything, what make
Law of Desire such an extremely
dark and compelling film, contributing a blistering realism that cuts through
Almodóvar's self-consciously Sirkian stylisation like a razor-edged
scimitar through butter.
Law of Desire is memorable for other reasons. The performances
are excellent right across the board, although Eusebio Poncela deserves a
special mention for his harrowingly convincing portrayal of Almodóvar's
quasi-alter ego, a successful director struggling to balance the competing
demands of his art and his tragically fraught human connections. Almodóvar's
mise-en-scène has none of the rough-and-ready, improvisational feel
of his earlier films and shows the confidence of a mature cineaste who knows
exactly how best to get across his intentions, with the result that
Law
of Desire is undoubtedly among his most satisfying and polished works,
arguably his first true masterpiece. The director's recurring use of
symbolism is at its most succinct and effective in the stand-out sequence
where the two rival lovers confront each other in a forbidding but beautifully
photographed coastal setting, viciously laying into each other with a towering
lighthouse (the most blatant of phallic symbols) boldly illuminated in the
background behind them.
Law of Desire abounds with moments of
such starting visual and dramatic power as this and leaves the spectator
in no doubt that Pedro Almodóvar is, of all the great film directors
of the late twentieth century, the one who probably has most to say about
the true nature of human beings as they struggle to come to terms with the
horrors and joys of existence.
© James Travers 2024
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pedro Almodóvar film:
Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios (1988)
Film Synopsis
Pablo Quintero is a gay Spanish filmmaker whose erotic films
have become something of an obsession for a young admirer named Antonio Benítez.
Pablo is considering ending an affair with his boyfriend Juan, who has left
Madrid to return to his home village in southern Spain, when the hitherto
religiously straight Antonio reluctantly agrees to have sex with him.
For Pablo, this is just another in a long line of meaningless liaisons, but
for the younger Antonio it is the beginning of a passionate love affair,
one that he has no intention of walking away from.
Pablo is far more preoccupied with his transgender sister Tina, whom he has
managed to alienate after using her traumatic real-life experiences as the
basis of his next film. Her outrage is nothing compared with what Antonio
feels on learning that Pablo still has fond feelings for Juan. Consumed
with jealousy, Antonio tracks down Juan and attempts to seduce him.
The encounter soon turns violent and Antonio throws his rival over a cliff.
The most likely suspect for Juan's murder, Pablo is pursued by the police.
After a car accident, the film director wakes up in hospital to find he has
lost his memory...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.